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13 Comfort Women Narratives: Report of the Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women

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When Sorry Isn't Enough
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch When Sorry Isn't Enough
© 2020 New York University Press, New York, USA

© 2020 New York University Press, New York, USA

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents ix
  3. Preface xix
  4. PART 1. Introduction
  5. 1 The Age of Apology 3
  6. Suggested Readings 12
  7. PART 2. Nazi Persecution
  8. Introduction
  9. 2 A Reparations Success Story? 17
  10. The Scope of Persecution
  11. 3 The German Third Reich and Its Victims: Nazi Ideology 23
  12. Holocaust Narratives
  13. 4 Memories of My Childhood in the Holocaust 33
  14. 5 The Human “Guinea Pigs” of Ravensbrück 43
  15. 6 Stranger in Exile 47
  16. The National Security Defense
  17. 7 Putative National Security Defense: Extracts from the Testimony of Nazi SS Group Leader Otto Ohlendorf 51
  18. German Reparations
  19. 8 German Compensation for National Socialist Crimes: United States Department of Justice Foreign Claims Settlement Commission 61
  20. 9 Romani Victims of the Holocaust and Swiss Complicity 68
  21. 10 German Reparations: Institutionalized Insufficiency 77
  22. Suggested Readings 81
  23. PART 3. Comfort Women
  24. Introduction
  25. 11 What Form Redress? 87
  26. The Comfort Women System
  27. 12 The Jugun Ianfu System 95
  28. 13 Comfort Women Narratives: Report of the Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women 101
  29. 14 The Nanking Massacre 104
  30. 15 Japan’s Official Responses to Nanking 109
  31. The Redress Movement
  32. 16 The Comfort Women Redress Movement 113
  33. 17 Japan’s Official Responses to Reparations 126
  34. A Legal Analysis of Reparations
  35. 18 Japan’s Settlement of the Post–World War II Reparations and Claims 135
  36. 19 Reparations: A Legal Analysis 141
  37. An American Response
  38. 20 Lipinski Resolution 149
  39. Suggested Readings 151
  40. PART 4. Japanese Americans
  41. Introduction
  42. 21 Japanese American Redress and the American Political Process: A Unique Achievement? 157
  43. The Internment Experience
  44. 22 The Internment of Americans of Japanese Ancestry 165
  45. 23 Executive Order 9066: Authorizing the Secretary of War to Prescribe Military Areas 169
  46. 24 Report of the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians 171
  47. 25 Japanese American Narratives 177
  48. The Redress Movement
  49. 26 Relocation, Redress, and the Report: A Historical Appraisal 183
  50. Forms of Redress
  51. 27 Redress Achieved, 1983–1990 189
  52. 28 Institutions and Interest Groups: Understanding the Passage of the Japanese American Redress Bill 190
  53. 29 Proclamation 4417: Confirming the Termination of the Executive Order Authorizing Japanese-American Internment 201
  54. 30 Response to Criticisms of Monetary Redress 203
  55. 31 Testimony of Representative Norman Y. Mineta 205
  56. 32 German Americans, Italian Americans, and the Constitutionality of Reparations: Jacobs v. Barr 206
  57. 33 The Case of the Japanese Peruvians 217
  58. 34 Letters from John J. McCloy and Karl R. Bendetsen 222
  59. Suggested Readings 228
  60. PART 5. Native Americans
  61. Introduction
  62. 35 Wild Redress? 233
  63. The Native American Experience
  64. 36 Native American Reparations: Five Hundred Years and Counting 241
  65. Native American Narratives
  66. 37 The Killing of Big Snake, a Ponca Chief, October 31, 1879 251
  67. 38 The Massacre at Wounded Knee, South Dakota, December 29, 1890 252
  68. 39 How the Indians Are Victimized by Government Agents and Soldiers 254
  69. 40 Forced Removal of the Winnebago Indians, Nebraska, October 3, 1865 257
  70. The Redress Movement: Land Claim Litigation
  71. 41 Indian Claims for Reparations, Compensation, and Restitution in the United States Legal System 261
  72. The Redress Movement: Land Claim Legislation
  73. 42 The True Nature of Congress’s Power over Indian Claims: An Essay on Venetie and the Uses of Silence in Federal Indian Law 273
  74. Repatriation of Religious and Cultural Artifacts
  75. 43 Repatriation Must Heal Old Wounds 283
  76. Wealth, Redistribution, and Sovereignty
  77. 44 Office of the Governor, Pete Wilson, State of California, Press Release 291
  78. 45 Statement of the Honorable Anthony R. Pico, Chairman, Viejas Band of Kumeyaay Indians, Press Conference 294
  79. 46 The Distribution of Wealth, Sovereignty, and Culture through Indian Gaming 298
  80. Suggested Readings 304
  81. PART 6. Slavery
  82. Introduction
  83. 47 Not Even an Apology? 309
  84. The Slave and the Free Black Experience
  85. 48 The Legal Status of African Americans during the Colonial Period 317
  86. 49 African Americans under the Antebellum Constitution: Supreme Court of the United States 325
  87. 50 Slave Narratives 327
  88. 51 Remembering Slavery 333
  89. 52 Life as a Free Black 336
  90. The Redress Movement
  91. 53 The Growing Movement for Reparations 341
  92. Forms of Redress: Apology
  93. 54 Why the North and South Should Have Apologized 347
  94. 55 Defense of Congressional Resolution Apologizing for Slavery 350
  95. 56 Clinton Opposes Slavery Apology 352
  96. 57 Ask Camille: Camille Paglia’s Online Advice for the Culturally Disgruntled 353
  97. 58 The Atlantic Slave Trade: On Both Sides, Reason for Remorse 355
  98. 59 They Didn’t March to Free the Slaves 358
  99. 60 Lincoln Apologizes 360
  100. Forms of Redress: Reparations
  101. 61 Special Field Order No. 15: “Forty Acres and a Mule” 365
  102. 62 The Commission to Study Reparations Proposals 367
  103. 63 Clinton and Conservatives Oppose Slavery Reparations 370
  104. 64 Collective Rehabilitation 372
  105. 65 The Constitutionality of Black Reparations 374
  106. Suggested Readings 390
  107. PART 7. Jim Crow
  108. Introduction
  109. 66 Redress for Racism? 395
  110. The Jim Crow Experience
  111. 67 The Triumph of White Supremacy 401
  112. Jim Crow Narratives
  113. 68 Jim Crow Narratives 407
  114. Forms of Redress
  115. 69 The United States Has Already Apologized for Racial Discrimination 413
  116. 70 The Long-Overdue Reparations for African Americans: Necessary for Societal Survival? 417
  117. 71 Reparations: Strategic Considerations for Black Americans 422
  118. 72 Repatriation as Reparations for Slavery and Jim-Crowism 427
  119. 73 Rosewood 435
  120. Suggested Readings 438
  121. PART 8. South Africa
  122. Introduction
  123. 74 What Price Reconciliation? 443
  124. The Apartheid Experience
  125. 75 African National Congress Statement to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission 451
  126. Apartheid Narratives
  127. 76 Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Amnesty Hearing: Testimony of Jeffrey T. Benzien 457
  128. 77 Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Amnesty Hearing: Affidavit and Testimony of Bassie Mkhumbuzi 461
  129. The Redress Movement
  130. 78 Alternatives and Adjuncts to Criminal Prosecutions 469
  131. Forms of Redress
  132. 79 Summary of Anti-Amnesty Case: Azanian Peoples Organization (AZAPO) and Others v. The President of the Republic of South Africa 477
  133. 80 Justice after Apartheid? Reflections on the South African TRC 479
  134. 81 Will the Amnesty Process Foster Reconciliation among South Africans? 487
  135. 82 Healing Racial Wounds? The Final Report of South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission 492
  136. 83 Introductory Notes to the Presentation of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s Proposed Reparation and Rehabilitation Policies 501
  137. 84 Truth and Reconciliation Commission Hearing, Testimony of Former President F. W. de Klerk 505
  138. 85 Affirmative Action as Reparation for Past Employment Discrimination in South Africa: Imperfect and Complex 506
  139. Suggested Readings 510
  140. Appendix: Selected List of Other Human Injustices 511
  141. Contributors 515
  142. Permissions 521
  143. Index 523
  144. About the Editor 536
Heruntergeladen am 3.10.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.18574/nyu/9780814739471.003.0018/html
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