Chapter
Foreword: Advancing Justice and Reconciliation in Communities Affected by Displacement
Introduction: Forced Migration, Transitional Justice, and Reconciliation: Links, Limits, and Possibilities
PART ONE: DISPLACEMENT, JUSTICE, AND RECONCILIATION: CONCEPTUAL AND POLICY LINKS
1 Refugees, Peacebuilding, and Reconciliation: Lessons from Policy, Practice, and Research
2 Reconciliation and Reintegration: Transitional Justice and the Resolution of Displacement
3 Property Rights and Public Interests: Restitution, Transitional Justice, and Post-conflict Reconciliation
PART TWO: RECONCILIATION AND EXILE: DIASPORA AND HOST COMMUNITY EXPERIENCES
4 Negotiating Place: Interpersonal Reconciliation and Emplacement
5 The Forgotten Ones: Vietnamese Catholics in Cambodia and Their Quest for Reconciliation
6 A Modest Reconciliation: Coming to Terms with Conflicted Stories through Oral History, Dialogue, and Playback Theatre in Montreal’s Rwandan Canadian Community
PART THREE: JUSTICE, RECONCILIATION, AND RESOLVING DISPLACEMENT: IN THEORY AND IN PRACTICE
7 Truth-Telling, Internal Displacement, and the Peace Process in Colombia
8 Return and Reintegration in Divided Societies: The Case of Bosnia and Herzegovina
9 Resolving Internal Displacement in Turkey: The Need for Reconciliation
10 Can Reconciliation Mechanisms in Post-conflict Settings Further Divide Communities? The Case of Lebanon
11 The Timor-Leste Commission for Reception, Truth, and Reconciliation and the 2006 Displacement Crisis in Timor-Leste: Reflections on Truth-Telling, Dialogue, and Durable Solutions
12 The Challenge of Prosecuting Forced Displacement at the International Criminal Court: The Case of Kenya
13 The Palestinian Refugee Issue: Intangible Needs and Moral Acknowledgment
14 Refugee Entitlement and the Passing of Time: Waldron’s Supersession Thesis and the Palestinian Refugee Case
Conclusion: Implications for Research, Policy, and Practice at the Intersection of Forced Migration, Transitional Justice, and Reconciliation