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justice
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Journal Article
positions (2014) 22 (3): 603–633.
Published: 01 August 2014
...Ying Xing At a time when professional law firms have widened the gap between the legal system and grassroots social life, “barefoot lawyers,” part-time legal workers in villages and towns, are paving the ways for people to “approach justice.” The emphasis on “welcoming law into the countryside...
Journal Article
positions (2005) 13 (2): 329–378.
Published: 01 May 2005
...Weigang Chen 2005 by Duke University Press 2005 Peripheral Justice:
The Marxist Tradition of Public Hegemony and
Its Implications in the Age of Globalization
Weigang Chen
The Issue: Culture and Peripheral Justice
How do we explain the intriguing fact that precisely...
Journal Article
positions (2012) 20 (3): 805–830.
Published: 01 August 2012
... the “Cambodian syndrome” and are productively rooted in “memory work.” Copyright 2012 by Duke University Press 2012 Cambodian American Memory Work: Justice and the “Cambodian Syndrome”
Cathy J. Schlund- Vials
The work of healing a country really happens inside each Cambodian...
Journal Article
positions (2024) 32 (3): 685–711.
Published: 01 August 2024
...Tian Li Abstract Through an examination of what the author calls the transnational Togani effect, which challenges legislative failures across both screens and borders, the author hopes to show how social justice films are deployed as a mode of critique that directly impacts the criminal justice...
FIGURES
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Journal Article
positions (2020) 28 (4): 905–933.
Published: 01 November 2020
... and their survivors? How has the drug war, by instilling a biopolitics of fear, transformed the latter’s ways of seeing and being? What becomes of justice amid images of injustice? For example, how do returning spirits of the dead that appear in dreams of their families stimulate phantasms of revenge? How is revenge...
Journal Article
positions (2023) 31 (4): 893–918.
Published: 01 November 2023
...Sudarat Musikawong; Malinee Khumsupa Abstract None of the perpetrators involved in the October 6, 1976, massacre in Thailand have been brought to justice. It has been this “culture of impunity” that limits the possibility of truth projects. Past state violence has been protected by the country's...
Journal Article
positions (2014) 22 (2): 329–369.
Published: 01 May 2014
...” and the theatrical. This article seeks to do justice to their complexity and to go beyond Manichaean condemnations of these films as blatant propaganda or apolitical rehabilitations as autonomous works of art. Copyright 2014 by Duke University Press 2014 Phantasmagoric Manchukuo:
Documentaries Produced...
Journal Article
positions (2015) 23 (4): 633–663.
Published: 01 November 2015
... but as an agonizing attempt to close the gap between truth and justice. Where truth may actually hinder the cause of reconciliation, what is the price of arriving at truth without reconciliation, and of implementing reconciliation without truth? Situating The Guest in the context of Hwang Sok-yong's own commentary...
Journal Article
positions (2010) 18 (1): 19–50.
Published: 01 February 2010
... created varying trauma art about the October 6 massacre as an aesthetic of vengeance, grief, and yearning to heal, of the struggle to remember forgotten histories, and of satiric moral outrage. I argue that the affective engagements of foreclosing retribution, of reconciliation, justice, social healing...
Journal Article
positions (2018) 26 (4): 817–845.
Published: 01 November 2018
..., a constant reminder that justice is yet to be achieved. This essay will explore, through ethnographic and textual analysis, these insistent but vanishing voices as they are evoked by former war criminals from Japan. These uncommon witnesses say that by testifying with the self-consciousness of former...
Journal Article
positions (2020) 28 (3): 659–675.
Published: 01 August 2020
...Kozue Akibayashi Japan occupies a unique position in the history of East Asia as the sole non-Western colonial power. Japan’s defeat in the Asia-Pacific War that ended its colonial expansion did not bring justice to its former colonies. The Japanese leadership and people were spared from being held...
Journal Article
positions (2022) 30 (3): 429–453.
Published: 01 August 2022
...Qian Zhu Abstract The idea of a “new village” first emerged in the years 1919–20 and was widely discussed by Chinese intellectuals, who advocated for its humanitarian and social justice purposes and its goal of constructing a new society. This article focuses on the new village movement in China...
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Journal Article
positions (2005) 13 (3): 649–658.
Published: 01 August 2005
...!
(“41 Red Hearts Forever with President Mao,” Beijing, 1968)
Why? Because entrusting [confier] the becoming of justice to being means
that the Just is a man. Only the superegoic humbling of oneself can put a
stop to the imminent certitude...
Journal Article
positions (2008) 16 (1): 39–77.
Published: 01 February 2008
... the complications of submission to
the law in the penal colony, with its temporal suspensions and its relation to
the machinery of justice.8 As in much of Kafka’s writing, it is also to show
the forms of dehumanization and desubjectivation — the process...
Journal Article
positions (1997) 5 (1): 107–136.
Published: 01 February 1997
... for the violations com-
mitted;
(c) action taken to bring to justice persons found to be responsible for
crimes;
(d) protection for victims, their relatives and friends;
(e...
Journal Article
positions (2012) 20 (3): 911–942.
Published: 01 August 2012
... 915
for many. Then there are the “other” countries, the “America” of peace,
justice, and equality that the United States fantasizes itself to be, and the
people’s paradises promised by the communist parties of Viet Nam, Cam...
Journal Article
positions (1995) 3 (3): 695–722.
Published: 01 August 1995
... observation, elimination of the “spectacle” of
punishment (no “severed heads and headless trunks” on display). After the
annexation of Korea in 1910,the Japanese colonial authorities brought their
police and justice system almost intact...
Journal Article
positions (2012) 20 (3): 831–850.
Published: 01 August 2012
... which there can be only one exit. In Seattle, a grand-
mother who simply wanted “quiet in her head” took her own life and that
of her family.27
Justice, Reconciliation, and Healing
For survivors of the Cambodian auto- genocide, the seeming...
Journal Article
positions (2004) 12 (1): 1–6.
Published: 01 February 2004
... and
now? What happens when we step away from the safety of retrospection
and toward the source of the anxiety—the internationalist intellectual in
contemporary justice movements? The individuals interviewed here are in
most respects like the readers...
Journal Article
positions (2015) 23 (4): 837–849.
Published: 01 November 2015
...-
tions for achieving historical, political, and legal justice through a form of
social punishment for perpetrators and official recognition of the death and
violence suffered by victims and their families. Now two years later, what
are your...
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