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  1. Abstract. This article begins with an overview of the varied meanings of reparation, restoration, and restorative justice, as they are applied in domestic and international contexts of law and criminal justice. It also considers why these terms have become popular in recent decades. Sections II and III explore the history, etymology, and uses ...

  2. till im. ies a measure of forced indemnity extracted by victors in war fromlosers. However, “make good again”), reparations have come to include material compensation paid to civil. society victims of state sponsored injustices.3 This kind of reparations also includes symbolic.

  3. Abstract. This paper seeks to articulate a conception of justice in reparations for victims of human rights violations when the aim is to repair a large number of cases, as opposed to individual, isolated cases. It starts with an effort to establish some semantic clarity by trying to distinguish between two different contexts for the use of the ...

  4. May 3, 2024 · Detailing the reparations movement’s history, task force Chair Kamila Moore described the first time a slave petitioned the U.S. government for redress, broader reparations efforts after the Civil War, and William Patterson and Paul Robeson charging the U.S. with genocide, as it was defined, before the United Nations in the 1950s.

  5. Aug 18, 2022 · In the event of wrongdoing, reparations are the means by which international law effects justice, both in individual cases and holistically. While establishing attributable wrongful conduct is a prerequisite to the engagement of reparations, the jurisprudence of redress provides an independent, substantive framework for the consideration of the consequences of responsibility.

  6. Jan 1, 2012 · The development of reparation and restoration in international law and domestic criminal justice. has proceeded on separate tracks, until recently. Today, in international law, reparation is the ...

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  8. by colonization has drawn attention to the importance of reparation and healing. Decolonization is the deconstruction of conflicts involving structural violence, characterized by discrimination and the unequal distribution of resources between advantaged and disadvantaged groups.2 It involves rebuilding relationships and perceptions between ...

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