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When sorry isn't enough [[electronic resource] ] : the controversy over apologies and reparations for human injustice / / edited by Roy L. Brooks
When sorry isn't enough [[electronic resource] ] : the controversy over apologies and reparations for human injustice / / edited by Roy L. Brooks
Pubbl/distr/stampa New York, : New York University Press, c1999
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (416 p.)
Disciplina 303.3/72
Altri autori (Persone) BrooksRoy L <1950-> (Roy Lavon)
Collana Critical America
Soggetto topico Social justice
Claims
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 0-8147-3947-4
0-585-43472-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto When Sorry Isn't Enough -- Front matter -- Contents -- Preface -- PART 1. Introduction -- 1 The Age of Apology -- Suggested Readings -- PART 2. Nazi Persecution -- Introduction -- 2 A Reparations Success Story? -- The Scope of Persecution -- 3 The German Third Reich and Its Victims: Nazi Ideology -- Holocaust Narratives -- 4 Memories of My Childhood in the Holocaust -- 5 The Human “Guinea Pigs” of Ravensbrück -- 6 Stranger in Exile -- The National Security Defense -- 7 Putative National Security Defense: Extracts from the Testimony of Nazi SS Group Leader Otto Ohlendorf -- German Reparations -- 8 German Compensation for National Socialist Crimes: United States Department of Justice Foreign Claims Settlement Commission -- 9 Romani Victims of the Holocaust and Swiss Complicity -- 10 German Reparations: Institutionalized Insufficiency -- Suggested Readings -- PART 3. Comfort Women -- Introduction -- 11 What Form Redress? -- The Comfort Women System -- 12 The Jugun Ianfu System -- 13 Comfort Women Narratives: Report of the Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women -- 14 The Nanking Massacre -- 15 Japan’s Official Responses to Nanking -- The Redress Movement -- 16 The Comfort Women Redress Movement -- 17 Japan’s Official Responses to Reparations -- A Legal Analysis of Reparations -- 18 Japan’s Settlement of the Post–World War II Reparations and Claims -- 19 Reparations: A Legal Analysis -- An American Response -- 20 Lipinski Resolution -- Suggested Readings -- PART 4. Japanese Americans -- Introduction -- 21 Japanese American Redress and the American Political Process: A Unique Achievement? -- The Internment Experience -- 22 The Internment of Americans of Japanese Ancestry -- 23 Executive Order 9066: Authorizing the Secretary of War to Prescribe Military Areas -- 24 Report of the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians -- 25 Japanese American Narratives -- The Redress Movement -- 26 Relocation, Redress, and the Report: A Historical Appraisal -- Forms of Redress -- 27 Redress Achieved, 1983–1990 -- 28 Institutions and Interest Groups: Understanding the Passage of the Japanese American Redress Bill -- 29 Proclamation 4417: Confirming the Termination of the Executive Order Authorizing Japanese-American Internment -- 30 Response to Criticisms of Monetary Redress -- 31 Testimony of Representative Norman Y. Mineta -- 32 German Americans, Italian Americans, and the Constitutionality of Reparations: Jacobs v. Barr -- 33 The Case of the Japanese Peruvians -- 34 Letters from John J. McCloy and Karl R. Bendetsen -- Suggested Readings -- PART 5. Native Americans -- Introduction -- 35 Wild Redress? -- The Native American Experience -- 36 Native American Reparations: Five Hundred Years and Counting -- Native American Narratives -- 37 The Killing of Big Snake, a Ponca Chief, October 31, 1879 -- 38 The Massacre at Wounded Knee, South Dakota, December 29, 1890 -- 39 How the Indians Are Victimized by Government Agents and Soldiers -- 40 Forced Removal of the Winnebago Indians, Nebraska, October 3, 1865 -- The Redress Movement: Land Claim Litigation -- 41 Indian Claims for Reparations, Compensation, and Restitution in the United States Legal System -- The Redress Movement: Land Claim Legislation -- 42 The True Nature of Congress’s Power over Indian Claims: An Essay on Venetie and the Uses of Silence in Federal Indian Law -- Repatriation of Religious and Cultural Artifacts -- 43 Repatriation Must Heal Old Wounds -- Wealth, Redistribution, and Sovereignty -- 44 Office of the Governor, Pete Wilson, State of California, Press Release -- 45 Statement of the Honorable Anthony R. Pico, Chairman, Viejas Band of Kumeyaay Indians, Press Conference -- 46 The Distribution of Wealth, Sovereignty, and Culture through Indian Gaming -- Suggested Readings -- PART 6. Slavery -- Introduction -- 47 Not Even an Apology? -- The Slave and the Free Black Experience -- 48 The Legal Status of African Americans during the Colonial Period -- 49 African Americans under the Antebellum Constitution: Supreme Court of the United States -- 50 Slave Narratives -- 51 Remembering Slavery -- 52 Life as a Free Black -- The Redress Movement -- 53 The Growing Movement for Reparations -- Forms of Redress: Apology -- 54 Why the North and South Should Have Apologized -- 55 Defense of Congressional Resolution Apologizing for Slavery -- 56 Clinton Opposes Slavery Apology -- 57 Ask Camille: Camille Paglia’s Online Advice for the Culturally Disgruntled -- 58 The Atlantic Slave Trade: On Both Sides, Reason for Remorse -- 59 They Didn’t March to Free the Slaves -- 60 Lincoln Apologizes -- Forms of Redress: Reparations -- 61 Special Field Order No. 15: “Forty Acres and a Mule” -- 62 The Commission to Study Reparations Proposals -- 63 Clinton and Conservatives Oppose Slavery Reparations -- 64 Collective Rehabilitation -- 65 The Constitutionality of Black Reparations -- Suggested Readings -- PART 7. Jim Crow -- Introduction -- 66 Redress for Racism? -- The Jim Crow Experience -- 67 The Triumph of White Supremacy -- Jim Crow Narratives -- 68 Jim Crow Narratives -- Forms of Redress -- 69 The United States Has Already Apologized for Racial Discrimination -- 70 The Long-Overdue Reparations for African Americans: Necessary for Societal Survival? -- 71 Reparations: Strategic Considerations for Black Americans -- 72 Repatriation as Reparations for Slavery and Jim-Crowism -- 73 Rosewood -- Suggested Readings -- PART 8. South Africa -- Introduction -- 74 What Price Reconciliation? -- The Apartheid Experience -- 75 African National Congress Statement to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission -- Apartheid Narratives -- 76 Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Amnesty Hearing: Testimony of Jeffrey T. Benzien -- 77 Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Amnesty Hearing: Affidavit and Testimony of Bassie Mkhumbuzi -- The Redress Movement -- 78 Alternatives and Adjuncts to Criminal Prosecutions -- Forms of Redress -- 79 Summary of Anti-Amnesty Case: Azanian Peoples Organization (AZAPO) and Others v. The President of the Republic of South Africa -- 80 Justice after Apartheid? Reflections on the South African TRC -- 81 Will the Amnesty Process Foster Reconciliation among South Africans? -- 82 Healing Racial Wounds? The Final Report of South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission -- 83 Introductory Notes to the Presentation of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Proposed Reparation and Rehabilitation Policies -- 84 Truth and Reconciliation Commission Hearing, Testimony of Former President F. W. de Klerk -- 85 Affirmative Action as Reparation for Past Employment Discrimination in South Africa: Imperfect and Complex -- Suggested Readings -- Appendix: Selected List of Other Human Injustices -- Contributors -- Permissions -- Index -- About the Editor
Record Nr. UNINA-9910455666203321
New York, : New York University Press, c1999
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
When sorry isn't enough [[electronic resource] ] : the controversy over apologies and reparations for human injustice / / edited by Roy L. Brooks
When sorry isn't enough [[electronic resource] ] : the controversy over apologies and reparations for human injustice / / edited by Roy L. Brooks
Pubbl/distr/stampa New York, : New York University Press, c1999
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (416 p.)
Disciplina 303.3/72
Altri autori (Persone) BrooksRoy L <1950-> (Roy Lavon)
Collana Critical America
Soggetto topico Social justice
Claims
ISBN 0-8147-3947-4
0-585-43472-7
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto When Sorry Isn't Enough -- Front matter -- Contents -- Preface -- PART 1. Introduction -- 1 The Age of Apology -- Suggested Readings -- PART 2. Nazi Persecution -- Introduction -- 2 A Reparations Success Story? -- The Scope of Persecution -- 3 The German Third Reich and Its Victims: Nazi Ideology -- Holocaust Narratives -- 4 Memories of My Childhood in the Holocaust -- 5 The Human “Guinea Pigs” of Ravensbrück -- 6 Stranger in Exile -- The National Security Defense -- 7 Putative National Security Defense: Extracts from the Testimony of Nazi SS Group Leader Otto Ohlendorf -- German Reparations -- 8 German Compensation for National Socialist Crimes: United States Department of Justice Foreign Claims Settlement Commission -- 9 Romani Victims of the Holocaust and Swiss Complicity -- 10 German Reparations: Institutionalized Insufficiency -- Suggested Readings -- PART 3. Comfort Women -- Introduction -- 11 What Form Redress? -- The Comfort Women System -- 12 The Jugun Ianfu System -- 13 Comfort Women Narratives: Report of the Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women -- 14 The Nanking Massacre -- 15 Japan’s Official Responses to Nanking -- The Redress Movement -- 16 The Comfort Women Redress Movement -- 17 Japan’s Official Responses to Reparations -- A Legal Analysis of Reparations -- 18 Japan’s Settlement of the Post–World War II Reparations and Claims -- 19 Reparations: A Legal Analysis -- An American Response -- 20 Lipinski Resolution -- Suggested Readings -- PART 4. Japanese Americans -- Introduction -- 21 Japanese American Redress and the American Political Process: A Unique Achievement? -- The Internment Experience -- 22 The Internment of Americans of Japanese Ancestry -- 23 Executive Order 9066: Authorizing the Secretary of War to Prescribe Military Areas -- 24 Report of the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians -- 25 Japanese American Narratives -- The Redress Movement -- 26 Relocation, Redress, and the Report: A Historical Appraisal -- Forms of Redress -- 27 Redress Achieved, 1983–1990 -- 28 Institutions and Interest Groups: Understanding the Passage of the Japanese American Redress Bill -- 29 Proclamation 4417: Confirming the Termination of the Executive Order Authorizing Japanese-American Internment -- 30 Response to Criticisms of Monetary Redress -- 31 Testimony of Representative Norman Y. Mineta -- 32 German Americans, Italian Americans, and the Constitutionality of Reparations: Jacobs v. Barr -- 33 The Case of the Japanese Peruvians -- 34 Letters from John J. McCloy and Karl R. Bendetsen -- Suggested Readings -- PART 5. Native Americans -- Introduction -- 35 Wild Redress? -- The Native American Experience -- 36 Native American Reparations: Five Hundred Years and Counting -- Native American Narratives -- 37 The Killing of Big Snake, a Ponca Chief, October 31, 1879 -- 38 The Massacre at Wounded Knee, South Dakota, December 29, 1890 -- 39 How the Indians Are Victimized by Government Agents and Soldiers -- 40 Forced Removal of the Winnebago Indians, Nebraska, October 3, 1865 -- The Redress Movement: Land Claim Litigation -- 41 Indian Claims for Reparations, Compensation, and Restitution in the United States Legal System -- The Redress Movement: Land Claim Legislation -- 42 The True Nature of Congress’s Power over Indian Claims: An Essay on Venetie and the Uses of Silence in Federal Indian Law -- Repatriation of Religious and Cultural Artifacts -- 43 Repatriation Must Heal Old Wounds -- Wealth, Redistribution, and Sovereignty -- 44 Office of the Governor, Pete Wilson, State of California, Press Release -- 45 Statement of the Honorable Anthony R. Pico, Chairman, Viejas Band of Kumeyaay Indians, Press Conference -- 46 The Distribution of Wealth, Sovereignty, and Culture through Indian Gaming -- Suggested Readings -- PART 6. Slavery -- Introduction -- 47 Not Even an Apology? -- The Slave and the Free Black Experience -- 48 The Legal Status of African Americans during the Colonial Period -- 49 African Americans under the Antebellum Constitution: Supreme Court of the United States -- 50 Slave Narratives -- 51 Remembering Slavery -- 52 Life as a Free Black -- The Redress Movement -- 53 The Growing Movement for Reparations -- Forms of Redress: Apology -- 54 Why the North and South Should Have Apologized -- 55 Defense of Congressional Resolution Apologizing for Slavery -- 56 Clinton Opposes Slavery Apology -- 57 Ask Camille: Camille Paglia’s Online Advice for the Culturally Disgruntled -- 58 The Atlantic Slave Trade: On Both Sides, Reason for Remorse -- 59 They Didn’t March to Free the Slaves -- 60 Lincoln Apologizes -- Forms of Redress: Reparations -- 61 Special Field Order No. 15: “Forty Acres and a Mule” -- 62 The Commission to Study Reparations Proposals -- 63 Clinton and Conservatives Oppose Slavery Reparations -- 64 Collective Rehabilitation -- 65 The Constitutionality of Black Reparations -- Suggested Readings -- PART 7. Jim Crow -- Introduction -- 66 Redress for Racism? -- The Jim Crow Experience -- 67 The Triumph of White Supremacy -- Jim Crow Narratives -- 68 Jim Crow Narratives -- Forms of Redress -- 69 The United States Has Already Apologized for Racial Discrimination -- 70 The Long-Overdue Reparations for African Americans: Necessary for Societal Survival? -- 71 Reparations: Strategic Considerations for Black Americans -- 72 Repatriation as Reparations for Slavery and Jim-Crowism -- 73 Rosewood -- Suggested Readings -- PART 8. South Africa -- Introduction -- 74 What Price Reconciliation? -- The Apartheid Experience -- 75 African National Congress Statement to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission -- Apartheid Narratives -- 76 Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Amnesty Hearing: Testimony of Jeffrey T. Benzien -- 77 Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Amnesty Hearing: Affidavit and Testimony of Bassie Mkhumbuzi -- The Redress Movement -- 78 Alternatives and Adjuncts to Criminal Prosecutions -- Forms of Redress -- 79 Summary of Anti-Amnesty Case: Azanian Peoples Organization (AZAPO) and Others v. The President of the Republic of South Africa -- 80 Justice after Apartheid? Reflections on the South African TRC -- 81 Will the Amnesty Process Foster Reconciliation among South Africans? -- 82 Healing Racial Wounds? The Final Report of South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission -- 83 Introductory Notes to the Presentation of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Proposed Reparation and Rehabilitation Policies -- 84 Truth and Reconciliation Commission Hearing, Testimony of Former President F. W. de Klerk -- 85 Affirmative Action as Reparation for Past Employment Discrimination in South Africa: Imperfect and Complex -- Suggested Readings -- Appendix: Selected List of Other Human Injustices -- Contributors -- Permissions -- Index -- About the Editor
Record Nr. UNINA-9910780178703321
New York, : New York University Press, c1999
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui