Justice Restored?: Between Rehabilitation and Reconciliation in China and Taiwan

Justice Restored?: Between Rehabilitation and Reconciliation in China and Taiwan

Justice Restored?: Between Rehabilitation and Reconciliation in China and Taiwan

Justice Restored?: Between Rehabilitation and Reconciliation in China and Taiwan

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Overview

How should past injustices be addressed in order to allow victims and perpetrators to overcome their memories and move on towards a better future? After the end of the Cultural Revolution and the period of martial law, these questions confronted the leadership on both sides of the Taiwan Straits. The process of finding answers and implementing them has been handicapped by historical, political and cultural factors. As party interests were at stake in terms of political legitimacy and social cohesion, policies of rehabilitation and compensation had to be adopted. The authors approach the issue from the perspectives of groups and individuals affected: intellectuals, indigenous peoples, political widows, or religious groups. The texts are based on a wide variety of sources and make relevant secondary literature from Taiwan and China accessible to the reader.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783631620335
Publisher: Peter Lang GmbH, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
Publication date: 03/19/2012
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.30(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Agnes Schick-Chen is associate professor at the Department of East Asian Studies, University of Vienna. She lived in Taipei, Nanjing and Hong Kong for reasons of study and research.
Astrid Lipinsky is junior professor at Wuerzburg University and lecturer at the University of Vienna. She is an international expert on gender and women’s rights issues.

Table of Contents

Contents: Astrid Lipinsky/Agnes Schick-Chen: Preface – Agnes S. Schick-Chen: Introduction: Coming to Terms with the Past on Both Sides of the Taiwan Strait: Historical and Political Context – Susanne Weigelin-Schwiedrzik: Coping with the Cultural Revolution: Contesting Interpretations – Shuangwen Liu: The Issue of Guilt in Ba Jin’s «Sui Xiang Lu (Random Thoughts)» – Astrid Lipinsky: Gender Issues of Transitional Justice in Taiwan and their Relevance for Today’s Women’s Movement – Yoshihisa Amae: The Role of the Prespyterian Church in Taiwan’s Transitional Justice – Rosa Enn: The Dao - Power and Powerlessness of Indigenous People in Times of Transition – Sonja Peschek: Transitional Justice in Multiethnic Taiwan. Han Chinese and Yuanzhumin-Identities in Conflict.
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