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Reconciliation by Stealth: How People Talk about War Crimes

Book
Denisa Kostovicova
2023
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Winner of the ISA Best Book in Human Rights

Reconciliation by Stealth advances a novel approach to evaluating the effects of transitional justice in postconflict societies. Through her examination of the Balkan conflicts, Denisa Kostovicova asks what happens when former adversaries discuss legacies of violence and atrocity, and whether it is possible to do so without further deepening animosities. Reconciliation by Stealth shifts our attention from what people say about war crimes, to how they deliberate past wrongs.

Bringing together theories of democratic deliberation and peacebuilding, Kostovicova demonstrates how people from opposing ethnic groups reconcile through reasoned, respectful, and empathetic deliberation about a difficult legacy. She finds that expression of ethnic difference plays a role in good-quality deliberation across ethnic lines, while revealed intraethnic divisions help deliberators expand moral horizons previously narrowed by conflict. In the process, people forge bonds of solidarity and offset divisive identity politics that bears upon their deliberations.

Reconciliation by Stealth shows us the importance of theoretical and methodological innovation in capturing how transitional justice can promote reconciliation, and points to the untapped potential of deliberative problem-solving to repair relationships fractured by conflict.

Thanks to generous funding from the London School of Economic and Political Science, the ebook editions of this book are available as Open Access volumes from Cornell Open (cornellpress.cornell.edu/cornell-open) and other repositories.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title page, Copyright page

pp. i-iv

Dedication

pp. v-vi

Contents

pp. vii-viii

Acknowledgments

pp. ix-xiii

Note on Transliteration

pp. xiv-xvi

Introduction: Reconciliation through Public Communication

pp. 1-16

1. Wars, Crimes, and Justice in the Balkans

pp. 17-33

2. Bringing Identities into Postconflict Deliberation

pp. 34-50

3. Quantifying Discourse in Transitional Justice

pp. 51-66

4. Words of Reason and Talk of Pain

pp. 67-89

5. Who Agrees and Who Disagrees

pp. 90-107

6. Discursive Solidarity against Identity Politics

pp. 108-126

Conclusion: Reconciliation and Deliberative Interethnic Contact

pp. 127-144

Appendix

pp. 145-152

Notes

pp. 153-204

Bibliography

pp. 205-238

Index

pp. 239-246
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