Northern Ireland has entered what is arguably the key phase in
its troubled political history -- truth recovery and dealing with
the legacy of the past -- yet the void in knowledge and the lack of
academic literature with regard to victims' rights is particularly
striking. This book analyzes truth recovery as a fundamental aspect
of the transition from political violence to peace, democracy and
stability in post-conflict Northern Ireland.
Kirk Simpson argues that it is essential for any process of
truth recovery in Northern Ireland to provide the victims of
political violence with the opportunity to express and articulate
their narratives of suffering within the context of public dialogic
processes. He outlines a unique and original model: that victims of
political violence should be enabled to engage in meaningful truth
recovery through a Habermasian process of public democratic
deliberation and communication involving direct dialogue with the
perpetrators of such violence. This process of 'communicative
justice' is framed within Habermas' theory of communicative action
and can help to ensure that legitimate truth recovery publicly
acknowledges the trauma of victims and subjects perpetrator
narratives of political violence to critical scrutiny and rational
deconstruction. Crucially, the book aims to contribute to the
empowerment of victims in Northern Ireland by stimulating
constructive discussion and awareness of hitherto silenced
narratives of the conflict. This difficult and unsettling
interrogation and interpretation of the conflict from a
comparatively 'unknown perspective' is central to the prospects for
critically examining and mastering the past in Northern
Ireland.
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