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In a country or community fractured by war and mass violence, who
is to determine "justice" and how it should be achieved? Truth
commissions, international courts, and financial restitution are
some of the various solutions that have been used in recent years.
However, these broad efforts at transitional justice may themselves
backfire, and sometimes lead to further injustice. Given its own
limitations and battered by political pressure from all sides,
transitional justice is an imperfect solution. Yet as Pierre Hazan
contends in his new book, it constitutes our best hope for
liberation from a cycle of violence begetting vengeance and more
violence.
At the beginning of the 21st century, the EU is facing deep political, social, and economic changes. The benefit of supranational organization is no longer obvious to European citizens and questions of legitimacy have accompanied the EU's development over the last decades. Regions - albeit often deemed "obsolete" - present themselves as stable and reliable partners in this turbulent environment: in being important objects of identification to their citizens, but also relevant political and legal entities in the EU's multilevel governance system. This edited volume asks about the role of regions and regional identity in a European Union that is perhaps struggling more than ever about its future.
In a country or community fractured by war and mass violence, who
is to determine "justice" and how it should be achieved? Truth
commissions, international courts, and financial restitution are
some of the various solutions that have been used in recent years.
However, these broad efforts at transitional justice may themselves
backfire, and sometimes lead to further injustice. Given its own
limitations and battered by political pressure from all sides,
transitional justice is an imperfect solution. Yet as Pierre Hazan
contends in his new book, it constitutes our best hope for
liberation from a cycle of violence begetting vengeance and more
violence.
Sarah Meyer untersucht, wie die Bildungsplane fur die Kindertagesbetreuung in Deutschland soziale Differenz thematisieren und mit padagogischer Bedeutung ausstatten. Dabei werden Bildungsplane als Dokumente bildungspolitischer Kommunikation und "Schauplatz" bildungsbezogener Reformbestrebungen verstanden. Anhand einer qualitativ-rekonstruktiven Dokumentenanalyse mit integrierter Argumentations-, Agency- und Bildanalyse wird aufgezeigt, wie fachliche Wissensangebote mit bildungspolitischen Ziel- und Idealvorstellungen verstrickt sind. Damit leistet die Autorin einen kritischen Beitrag zum fruhpadagogischen Differenzdiskurs an der Schnittstelle zwischen Wissenschaft, padagogischer Praxis und Bildungspolitik.
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