Reparations for Slavery in International Law Transatlantic Enslavement, the Maangamizi, and the Making of International Law electronic Katarina Schwarz
Material type: TextSeries: Oxford AcademicPublisher: New York, NY Oxford University Press 2022Edition: First EditionDescription: 283 p All black and white imagesContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780197636428
- Reparations for Slavery in IL
- 342
- K3267 S39
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents: Acknowledgments – Note on Language – Table of Cases – Table of Legislation – Introduction: The Reparations Debate and International Law – 1. From the “Transatlantic Slave Trade” to the Maangamizi – 2. The Maangamizi and the Making of International Law – 3. Adjudicating the “Past”: The Impact of Time on Reparability – 4. Toward a Theory of Reparatory Justice – 5. Expanding Understandings of Reparatory Justice through Multiple Modalities of Redress – 6. The Causal Chains Connecting Historical Enslavement and Contemporary Redress – 7. Reparatory Justice in Transition – Conclusion: The Reparations Debate beyond International Law – Work Cited – Index
Reparations for Slavery in International Law examines the case for contemporary redress for the harms and legacies of transatlantic enslavement from a legal perspective. It critically evaluates the history of transatlantic enslavement and the evolutions in international law that justified and perpetuated the exploitation of African people and people of African descent. It unpacks the requirements of state responsibility, assessing the impact of time on claims for redress for historic injustices. It presents a new theory of reparatory justice, responsive to both the underpinning principles and the modalities of redress in international law. This book considers the emerging practice of reparations in transitional justice and the relevance of these frameworks in cases of widespread historic injustice, while upending orthodox understandings of the international legal frameworks relevant to case for reparations. In so doing, it opens new space for the reconsideration not only of the international legal claim for reparations for slavery but also the moral and political case.
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