ID | 082600 |
Title Proper | CAVR |
Other Title Information | Justice and reconciliation in a Time of "impoverished political possibilities and the politics of Sri Lanka |
Language | ENG |
Author | Nevins, Joseph |
Publication | 2008. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article provides an overview of, and analyzes, how the final report of East Timor's Commission on Reception, Truth and Reconciliation (CAVR) treated matters of responsibility for gross human rights abuses, accountability and reconciliation. While the article acknowledges the value of the report, it highlights Chega!'s limitations. The CAVR did not go as far as it could and should have in analyzing responsibility for atrocities and recommending amends. In making this argument, this article moves beyond relatively conventional analyses of reconciliation that focus on individuals and their attitudes, values and beliefs, and overlook collective and material forms of violence and injustice. Instead, it focuses on state actors, particularly those beyond Indonesia, who aided and abetted Jakarta's crimes, while advocating a wide-ranging analysis and repair of the associated damage. In doing so, the article contends that reparations for the damage must go beyond the immediate conflict so that those persons, groups or institutions whose privilege in part derived from East Timor's victimization also provide amends. It thus champions the notion that reconciliation and redistributive justice are inextricably linked |
`In' analytical Note | Pacific Affairs Vol. 80, No.4; Winter 2008: p592-602 |
Journal Source | Pacific Affairs Vol. 80, No.4; Winter 2008: p592-602 |
Key Words | East Timor ; Commission on Reception, Truth and Reconciliation ; CAVR |