
Reconciliation
Rachel Kerr(Author)
Polity Press
1st Edition
Will be published approx. on 4. December 2026
Book
Hardback
200 pages
978-1-5095-6504-7 (ISBN)
Description
Reconciliation is a concept that resists easy definition. Almost invariably invoked in post-conflict peacebuilding and transitional justice, it is just as often resisted and railed against by communities affected by conflict. Whilst there is consensus that reconciliation is about building or rebuilding relationships, there is vast disagreement on what this means and what it might entail. Reconciliation is a contested and historically contingent concept and practice, shaped by tradition and global norms and reframed in local practices.
Rachel Kerr traces the layered meanings and paradoxical nature of reconciliation: the demands to pursue justice and peace; to remember and to forget; to reckon with divisions in the past and to imagine a shared future. With clarity and compassion, she engages with diverse reconciliatory approaches and explores their relationship to peace, justice, forgiveness, truth and repair, memory, art, dialogue and resistance. Drawing on historical vignettes, contemporary case studies and interdisciplinary research, Kerr examines reconciliation's promise and limits as a space to negotiate complexity and contradiction.
Reconciliation is a critical resource for anyone interested in one of the most pressing security challenges of our time.
Rachel Kerr traces the layered meanings and paradoxical nature of reconciliation: the demands to pursue justice and peace; to remember and to forget; to reckon with divisions in the past and to imagine a shared future. With clarity and compassion, she engages with diverse reconciliatory approaches and explores their relationship to peace, justice, forgiveness, truth and repair, memory, art, dialogue and resistance. Drawing on historical vignettes, contemporary case studies and interdisciplinary research, Kerr examines reconciliation's promise and limits as a space to negotiate complexity and contradiction.
Reconciliation is a critical resource for anyone interested in one of the most pressing security challenges of our time.
Reviews / Votes
"An outstanding achievement, defining reconciliation as a process that must be constantly renewed to meet the unprecedented levels of threats to global peace and security."Tom Woodhouse, Emeritus Professor, University of Bradford
"Scholars and practitioners grappling with post-atrocity contexts have needed this book for a long time. With characteristic clarity and by appreciating complex, complicating, and even competing perspectives, Kerr brings us closer to understanding reconciliation and what it demands of us."
Mark Kersten, University of the Fraser Valley and Senior Consultant, Wayamo Foundation
"Rachel Kerr's masterful and exceptionally well-written book Reconciliation is a timely, ambitious, and comprehensive contribution to one of the most pressing and most misunderstood concepts in contemporary political life."
Gloria Yayra A. Ayee, Lecturer and Senior Fellow, Harvard University
More details
Series
Edition
1. Auflage
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
ISBN-13
978-1-5095-6504-7 (9781509565047)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Person
Rachel Kerr is Professor of War and Society in the Department of War Studies at King's College London.
Content
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 The Idea of Reconciliation
2 Peace, Justice and Reconciliation
3 Forgiveness and Reconciliation
4 Truth and Reconciliation
5 Reconciliation and Repair
6 Memory and Reconciliation
7 Art and Reconciliation
8 Dialogue and Reconciliation
9 Evaluating Reconciliation
10 Resisting Reconciliation
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Introduction
1 The Idea of Reconciliation
2 Peace, Justice and Reconciliation
3 Forgiveness and Reconciliation
4 Truth and Reconciliation
5 Reconciliation and Repair
6 Memory and Reconciliation
7 Art and Reconciliation
8 Dialogue and Reconciliation
9 Evaluating Reconciliation
10 Resisting Reconciliation
Notes
Bibliography
Index