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ID090354
Title ProperHaunted past
Other Title Informationrequesting forgiveness for wrongdoing in international relations
LanguageENG
AuthorLowenheim, Nava
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines why states ask for forgiveness from other states or peoples that they have harmed. Asking for forgiveness has significant political, legal, and moral implications. But beyond these, the subject concerns how states confront their history and their collective responsibility for wrongdoing. My focus on the reasons states have for asking forgiveness could also improve our understanding of conflict resolution. The article introduces an innovative typology of requests for forgiveness by presenting important conceptual distinctions in the terminology currently employed in the field. Apologies, regrets, and expressions of sorrow are conceptualised as distinct avenues of asking forgiveness with varying degrees of significance and meaningfulness. I assert that the type of request for forgiveness is influenced by the degree of severity attributed to a wrongdoing and by the extent to which a state perceives its image as threatened by its wrongful act. The article analyses the important 1951 statement of West Germany's Chancellor Adenauer regarding the Jewish Holocaust as an example of a type of request for forgiveness.
`In' analytical NoteReview of International Studies Vol. 35, No. 3; Jul 2009: p.531-555
Journal SourceReview of International Studies Vol. 35, No. 3; Jul 2009: p.531-555
Key WordsHaunted Past ;  International Relations ;  Forgiveness


 
 
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