When Sorry Isn't Enough : the Controversy over Apologies and Reparations for Human Injustice.
""How much compensation ought to be paid to a woman who was raped 7,500 times? What would the members of the Commission want for their daughters if their daughters had been raped even once?""--Karen Parker, speaking before the U.N. Commission on Human Rights Seemingly every week,...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
New York :
NYU Press,
1999.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- When Sorry Isn�t Enough
- Contents
- Preface
- Part 1: Introduction
- Chapter 1: The Age of Apology
- Suggested Readings
- Part 2: Nazi Persecution
- Introduction
- Chapter 2: A Reparations Success Story?
- The Scope of Persecution
- Chapter 3: The German Third Reich and Its Victims
- Holocaust Narratives
- Chapter 4: Memories of My Childhood in the Holocaust
- Chapter 5: The Human “Guinea Pigs� of Ravensbr�ck
- Chapter 6: Stranger in Exile
- The National Security Defense
- Chapter 7: Putative National Security Defense
- German ReparationsChapter 8: German Compensation for National Socialist Crimes
- Chapter 9: Romani Victims of the Holocaust and Swiss Complicity
- Chapter 10: German Reparations
- Suggested Readings
- Part 3: Comfort Women
- Introduction
- Chapter 11: What Form Redress?
- The Comfort Women System
- Chapter 12: The Jugun Ianfu System
- Chapter 13: Comfort Women Narratives
- Chapter 14: The Nanking Massacre
- Chapter 15: Japan�s Official Responses to Nanking
- The Redress Movement
- Chapter 16: The Comfort Women Redress Movement
- Chapter 17: Japan�s Official Responses to ReparationsA Legal Analysis of Reparations
- Chapter 18: Japan�s Settlement of the Post�World War II Reparations and Claims
- An American Response
- Chapter 19: Reparations
- Chapter 20: Lipinski Resolution
- Suggested Readings
- Part 4: Japanese Americans
- Introduction
- Chapter 21: Japanese American Redress and the American Political Process
- The Internment Experience
- Chapter 22:The Internment of Americans of Japanese Ancestry
- Chapter 23: Executive Order 9066
- Chapter 24: Report of the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of CiviliansChapter 25: Japanese American Narratives
- The Redress Movement
- Chapter 26: Relocation, Redress, and the Report
- Forms of Redress
- Chapter 27: Redress Achieved, 1983�1990
- Chapter 28: Institutions and Interest Groups
- Chapter 29: Proclamation 4417
- Chapter 30: Response to Criticisms of Monetary Redress
- Chapter 31: Testimony of Representative Norman Y. Mineta
- Chapter 32: German Americans, Italian Americans, and the Constitutionality of Reparations
- Chapter 33: The Case of the Japanese PeruviansChapter 34: Letters from John J. McCloy and Karl R. Bendetsen
- Suggested Readings
- Part 5: Native Americans
- Introduction
- Chapter 35: Wild Redress?
- The Native American Experience
- Chapter 36: Native American Reparations
- Native American Narratives
- Chapter 37: The Killing of Big Snake, a Ponca Chief, October 31, 1879
- Chapter 38: The Massacre at Wounded Knee, South Dakota, December 29, 1890
- Chapter 40: Forced Removal of the Winnebago Indians, Nebraska, October 3, 1865