The personal and the political: forgiveness and reconciliation in restorative justice
Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, Vol. 12, No. 3, pg. 399-423.
Ari Kohen
At the center of this paper are three questions: in the absence of a
religious worldview, can one gain access to the concepts of forgiveness
and reconciliation, can reconciliation be achieved in the absence of
forgiveness or does the former depend in some way upon the latter, and
can we make sense of a restorative approach to justice in the absence
of either forgiveness or reconciliation? To answer these questions, I
look closely at the concept of forgiveness in the first section of this
article with the goals of disentangling it from its religious
undertones and emphasizing its importance to the very concept of
restorative justice. Drawing on both theoretical work and practical
examples, I argue that forgiveness is not necessarily a religious
concept - contrary to common perception - and that, contra Zehr, it is
a foundational component of restorative justice. Having considered this
first problem, I turn - in the second section - to a discussion of the
concept of reconciliation, arguing that personal and political
reconciliation must be separated from one another and from the concept
of forgiveness. Ultimately, I conclude that forgiveness and
reconciliation are quite different concepts, that the latter relies on
the former, and that the latter is a goal rather than a necessary
component of restorative justice. Drawing largely on the work of Hannah
Arendt, Susan Dwyer, Trudy Govier, and Howard Zehr, as well as
discussions with members of Murder Victims' Families for
Reconciliation, I argue that political reconciliation between groups
can be achieved in the absence of personal reconciliation between
individual victims and perpetrators in those groups. Further, I
demonstrate that restorative practices open up the possibility of both
types of reconciliation, but that they are ultimately founded only on
the principle of forgiveness.
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