The quest for reparations for Indian residential school abuse : confronting the legacy of the independent assessment process / Konstantin Petoukhov.
Rodzaj materiału:
TekstSerie: Routledge frontiers of criminal justiceWydawca: New York, NY : Routledge, 2025Opis: pages cmTyp zawartości: - text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781032824772
- 9781032828008
- 362.84/97071
- E96.5 .P48 2025
Książki
| Obecna biblioteka | Sygnatura | Status | Kod kreskowy | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biblioteka Instytutu Solidarności i Męstwa im. W. Pileckiego | 22427 (Przeglądaj półkę(Otwórz poniżej)) | Dostępny | 00022427 |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
The Road to Reparations for Indian Residential School Abuse -- Theorizing Reparations for Indigenous People in Ongoing Settler Colonialism -- The Hierarchies of Victimization in the Independent Assessment Process -- Specifying the Parameters of Exchange of Money for Violence in the IAP -- The IAP as a violent Settler Colonial Legal Process -- Resistance, Contestation, and Refusal in the IAP -- Moving Forward: Concluding Remarks and Directions for Future Research.
"This book explores the complexities and nuances of reparations for victims and survivors of settler colonial violence. It centres its analysis on the Independent Assessment Process (IAP), a financial compensation program that was designed to address the horrific legacy of Canada's Indian Residential School system, which was established to assimilate Indigenous children into settler Canadian society. The reader of this book will learn about the impact of the IAP as a mechanism of redress for the physical and sexual abuse that Indigenous children experienced while attending the Indian Residential Schools. Through the analysis of unique perspectives and first-hand accounts of survivors, lawyers, claims adjudicators, and health support workers who participated in the IAP, the book tells a story of former Indian Residential School students' struggle for justice. This book invites the reader to explore several themes related to the IAP that engage with the idea of financial compensation as redress to settler colonial violence. By combining insights from several theoretical frameworks with empirical data in a sophisticated yet accessible manner, it poses the following questions: How does money compensate survivors of institutional child abuse and how do survivors construct narratives of victimization to frame their experiences and realities in a compensation process? The target audience for this book include scholars, educators, practitioners, students, and members of the general public whose research interests include settler colonial studies, history, reparations, transitional justice, Indigenous studies, and critical victimology"-- Provided by publisher.