Part I: Case Studies
1: María José Guembe: Economic Reparations for Grave Human Rights
Violations: The Argentine Experience
2: Elizabeth Lira: The Reparations Policy for Human Rights
Violations in Chile
3: Ignacio Cano, Patrícia Ferreira: The Reparations Program in
Brazil
4: Alex Segovia: The Reparations Proposals of the Truth Commissions
in El Salvador and Haiti: A History of Non-Compliance
5: Chris Colvin: Overview of the Reparations Program in South
Africa
6: Diana Cammack: Reparations in Malawi
7: Eric Yamamoto, Liann Ebesugawa: Report on Redress: The
Japanese-American Internment
8: Samuel Issacharoff, Anna Morawiec Mansfield: Compensation for
the Victims of September 11th
9: Hans van Houtte, Hans Das and Bart Delmartino: The United
Nations Compensation Commission
10: Ariel Colonomos, Andrea Armstrong: German Reparations to the
Jews after World War Two: A Turning Point in the History of
Reparations
11: John Authers: Making Good Again: Compensation for Nazi
Concentration Camp Inmates
Part II: Thematic Studies
12: Pablo de Greiff: Justice and Reparations
13: Richard Falk: Reparations, International Law, and Global
Justice: A New Frontier
14: Arturo Carrillo: The Relevance of Inter-American Human Rights
Law and Practice to Repairing the Past
15: Jaime Malamud-Goti, Lucas Grosman: Reparations and Civil
Litigation: Compensation for Human Rights Violations in
Transitional Democracies
16: Brandon Hamber: Narrowing the Micro and Macro: A Psychological
Perspective on Reparations in Societies in Transition
17: M.Brinton Lykes, Marcie Mersky: Reparations and Mental Health:
Psychosocial Interventions towards Healing, Human Agency, and
Rethreading Social Realities
18: Colleen Duggan Adila M. Abusharaf: Reparation of Sexual
Violence in Democratic Transitions: The Search for Gender
Justice
19: Alex Segovia: Financing Reparations Programs: Reflections from
International Experience
20: Hans Dieter Seibel with Andrea Armstrong: Reparations and
Microfinance Schemes
Part III: Primary Documents and Legislation from Case Studies
21: Argentina
22: Nunca Más: The Report of the Argentine National Commission on
the Disappeared,
Part VI: Recommendations and Conclusions, 'Recommendations'
23: Brazil
24: El Salvador
25: Haiti
26: South Africa
27: Malawi
28: US: Japanese-American Internment
29: US: September 11, 2001
30: Germany: Jewish Victims of the Holocaust
31: Germany: Forced and Slave Labor
Pablo De Greiff is Director of Research at the International Center
for Transitional Justice (ICTJ). Originally from Colombia, he
obtained his B.A. at Yale and his Ph.D. in philosophy at
Northwestern University. As Director of the ICTJ's Research Unit,
he has overseen a global reparations project and has been actively
engaged in disseminating the results via papers, conferences, and
technical assistance in Guatemala, Peru, and to the United Nations.
Prior to
joining ICTJ, he was associate professor in the Department of
Philosophy at the State University of New York at Buffalo. He has
written extensively on transitions to democracy, democratic theory,
and the
relationship between morality, politics, and law. From 2000 to
2001, he was the recipient of a fellowship from the National
Endowment for the Humanities, and was a Laurance S. Rockefeller
Fellow at the Center for Human Values at Princeton University.
`Review from previous edition De Greiff's professional
philosophical background is what elevates and distinguishes this
Handbook from being merely a how-to exercise...Highly
recommended.
'
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