Knowing What I Know Now: Youth Experiences of Dictatorship and Transitional Justice in the Gambia

IF 1.7 1区 社会学 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Aminata Ndow
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

This article contributes to the empirical evidence concerning the reception of transitional justice processes and the experiences of youth in contexts of authoritarian rule. It explores how eight students in the Gambia receive, perceive and experience learning about what happened in the past by watching the testimonies told at the Truth Reconciliation and Reparations Commission. Based on conversational interviews, I argue that for the students in this study, the past enters the present as rememory. By recalling their rememories, an imaginative re-construction of the Jammeh past emerges which uncovers how the biopoliticized state functioned in everyday life, how loyalty and obedience to Jammeh was indoctrinated from a young age and how children remember. By paying attention to youth’s rememories and perceptions of the revelations of truth commissions, and the meanings they attribute to these revelations, transitional justice scholars and practitioners can gain a more holistic understanding of how youth experience and make sense of transitional justice processes.
知道我现在知道的:冈比亚独裁和过渡时期司法的青年经历
本文提供了关于接受过渡时期司法程序和专制统治背景下青年经验的经验证据。它探讨了冈比亚的八名学生如何通过观看真相和解与赔偿委员会的证词来接受、感知和体验过去发生的事情。基于对话性访谈,我认为对于本研究中的学生来说,过去作为记忆进入现在。通过回忆他们的记忆,对Jammeh的过去进行了富有想象力的重建,揭示了生物政治化的国家如何在日常生活中发挥作用,如何从小灌输对Jammeh的忠诚和服从,以及儿童如何记忆。通过关注青年对真相委员会揭露的记忆和看法,以及他们赋予这些揭露的意义,过渡时期司法学者和从业者可以更全面地了解青年如何体验和理解过渡时期司法过程。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
31.20%
发文量
37
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