Title:
Reconciliation through truth : a reckoning of apartheid's criminal governance
Author:
Asmal, Kader.
ISBN:
9780864863546
9780852558034
9780852558027
9780312212759
9780312212742
Personal Author:
Edition:
2nd ed., with afterword.
Publication Information:
Cape Town : David Philip Publishers ; Oxford : James Currey Publishers ; New York : St. Martin's Press, c1997.
Physical Description:
231 p. ; 24 cm.
General Note:
Afterword (p. I-XV) bound between p. 216 and 217.
Includes index.
Contents:
Foreword / Nelson Mandela -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Why Face the Past? -- 3. Achieving Justice Through Truth -- 4. Acknowledging the Illegitimacy of Apartheid -- 5. Stark Opposites: Apartheid and the Resistance to It -- 6. Achieving Genuine Reconciliation -- 7. The Need to Decriminalise the Resistance -- 8. Acknowledging the Need for Corrective Action -- 9. Confronting the Roots of Violence -- 10. Acknowledging the Humanity of the Resistance -- 11. The Morality of Armed Resistance -- 12. Establishing Equality Before the Law -- 13. Placing Property on a Legitimate Footing -- 14. Facing Up to Collective Responsibility -- 15. Apartheid and Its Neighbours -- 16. Apartheid and the International Community -- 17. Finding One South Africa.
Abstract:
The South African transition, while widely billed as a miracle, has not yet received the same systematic treatment as political transitions elsewhere. The book serves as a primary text in the new South African politics, presenting for the first time the new country's view of its old self. It scans the key issues and debates of the transition. In addressing these issues, the book breaks new ground. It drives home the depth and strength of allegiance that the old regime commanded from its beneficiaries. It emphasises the long-standing ideals that held sway among those who resisted apartheid. And it makes clear that, in Nelson Mandela's words, a long walk remains, even now, en route to freedom. The authors compellingly demonstrate how the old system violated the world's basic human norms - and how the new country is raising and enhancing the status of the international norms on which apartheid trampled.
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