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Resilient Relations: Rethinking Truth, Reconciliation, and Justice in Cambodia
Author DeAngelo, Darcie (著)
Source Journal of Global Buddhism
Volumev.22 n.1
Date2021
Pages173 - 189
PublisherJournal of Global Buddhism
Publisher Url https://www.unilu.ch/en/faculties/faculty-of-humanities-and-social-sciences/institutes-departements-and-research-centres/department-for-the-study-of-religions/
LocationLucerne, Switzerland
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
Keywordrelationality; Theravada Buddhism; postwar; resilience; Cambodia
AbstractIn her critique of the Khmer Rouge tribunals, the legal scholar Virginia Hancock suggests that tribunal forms of justice could fail Cambodia. For them to succeed, she recommends that the tribunals account for the fact that Buddhism emphasizes a “community-oriented theory of crimes against humanity,” in that the judges should not understand harm as involving only individual culprits and victims (2008: 88). This individuality, she suggests, does not consider the modes of resilience enacted by Theravada Buddhists. As I will show in this paper, some Cambodians have dealt with violence from the past differently than a strict categorization of perpetrator and victim. Who can be held accountable for that violence if everyone is, at once, perpetrator and victim? Given this mode of being-in-the-world, how do people find resilience in the face of past trauma?
Table of contentsDisrupted Relations 176
Insolubilities 177
Please pity-love [me] 180
Perpetrators and victims 181
Handlers and animals 183
Activists and police 185
Men and Monsters 185
ISSN15276457 (E)
DOI10.5281/zenodo.4727589
Hits80
Created date2022.03.04
Modified date2022.03.04



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