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دانلود کتاب Power, Race, and Justice: The Restorative Dialogue We Will Not Have

دانلود کتاب قدرت، نژاد و عدالت: گفتگوی ترمیمی که نخواهیم داشت

Power, Race, and Justice: The Restorative Dialogue We Will Not Have

مشخصات کتاب

Power, Race, and Justice: The Restorative Dialogue We Will Not Have

ویرایش: 1 
نویسندگان:   
سری:  
ISBN (شابک) : 1472488350, 9781472488350 
ناشر: Routledge 
سال نشر: 2022 
تعداد صفحات: 314 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 4 مگابایت 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 49,000



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توجه داشته باشید کتاب قدرت، نژاد و عدالت: گفتگوی ترمیمی که نخواهیم داشت نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.


توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب قدرت، نژاد و عدالت: گفتگوی ترمیمی که نخواهیم داشت



ما در دنیایی زندگی می‌کنیم که سوء استفاده از قدرت به یک هنجار جدید تبدیل شده است، و همچنین بزرگترین محرک خاموش نابرابری‌های مداوم، نژادپرستی و نقض حقوق بشر است. پیامدهای اقتصادی-اجتماعی COVID-19 را فقط می توان با پیامدهای پس از جنگ جهانی دوم مقایسه کرد. همانطور که بشریت در حال دست و پنجه نرم کردن با آنهاست، این کتاب به موقع تفکر فعلی را به چالش می کشد، در حالی که یک چارچوب هنجاری و عملی بسیار مورد نیاز برای آشکار ساختن و به چالش کشیدن ساختارهای قدرتی ایجاد می کند که احساسات ناخودآگاه ناامیدی و شکست ما را تغذیه می کند.

ساختار یافته. این کتاب حول چهار مفهوم قدرت، نژاد، عدالت و عدالت ترمیمی، از داده‌های تجربی جدید و تحلیل هنجاری برای بازسازی روشی که ما از سوء استفاده از قدرت و آسیب در سطوح بین‌فردی، بین‌اجتماعی و بین‌المللی جلوگیری می‌کنیم، استفاده می‌کند. این کتاب لنزهای جدیدی را ارائه می دهد که به ما امکان می دهد قدرت، نژاد و عدالت را در واقعیتی مدرن ببینیم که در آن جوامع ساکت شده اند، اما از طریق عدالت ترمیمی در حال افزایش صدا هستند. این کتاب با مطالعات موردی نوشته شده توسط بازماندگان، تمرین‌کنندگان و کسانی که تجربیات مستقیم سوء استفاده از قدرت و نابرابری دارند، غنی شده است. از طریق روش‌های تحقیقی قوی، تک‌نگاری جدید گاوریلیدس اشکال جدیدی از برده‌داری را آشکار می‌کند، در حالی که چارچوبی جدید و فلسفی برای مجازات ترمیمی از طریق اذعان به درد و استفاده از کاتارسیس برای دگرگونی درونی و توانمندسازی فردی ایجاد می‌کند. این یک کتاب قدرتمند و به موقع است که امید بسیار مورد نیاز را ایجاد می کند.

این کتاب از طریق گفت‌وگوی چند رشته‌ای که از فلسفه و نظریه انتقادی، علوم اجتماعی، جرم‌شناسی، حقوق، روان‌شناسی و حقوق بشر استفاده می‌کند، راه‌های جدیدی را برای پزشکان، محققان و سیاست‌گذاران در سطح بین‌المللی باز می‌کند.


توضیحاتی درمورد کتاب به خارجی

We are living in a world where power abuse has become the new norm, as well as the biggest, silent driver of persistent inequalities, racism and human rights violations. The COVID-19 socio-economic consequences can only be compared with those that followed World War II. As humanity is getting to grips with them, this timely book challenges current thinking, while creating a much needed normative and practical framework for revealing and challenging the power structures that feed our subconscious feelings of despair and defeatism.

Structured around the four concepts of power, race, justice and restorative justice, the book uses empirical new data and normative analysis to reconstruct the way we prevent power abuse and harm at the inter-personal, inter-community and international levels. This book offers new lenses, which allow us to view power, race and justice in a modern reality where communities have been silenced, but through restorative justice are gaining voice. The book is enriched with case studies written by survivors, practitioners and those with direct experiences of power abuse and inequality. Through robust research methodologies, Gavrielides’s new monograph reveals new forms of slavery, while creating a new, philosophical framework for restorative punishment through the acknowledgement of pain and the use of catharsis for internal transformation and individual empowerment. This is a powerful and timely book that generates much needed hope.

Through a multi-disciplinary dialogue that uses philosophy and critical theory, social sciences, criminology, law, psychology and human rights, the book opens new avenues for practitioners, researchers and policy makers internationally.



فهرست مطالب

Endorsement Page
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Foreword: Professor John Braithwaite, Australian National University,  Australia
Preface: Kay Pranis, independent trainer and facilitator for peacemaking
circles, leader in Restorative Justice and Circle Process movements
Introduction and acknowledgements
	1 Courage, strength and responsibility
	2 Acknowledgements
	3 Awakening
	4 The book’s key aims
	5 The book’s structure
	References
Part I: Power, race, justice and restorative justice challenged: The beginning of awakening
	Chapter 1: Challenging the power that racialises us all
		1.1 Impetus and a change from within
		1.2 Power is everywhere
		1.3 Three levers of power and control
			Lever no. 1: Power and control through financial terror
			Lever no. 2: Power and control through security terror
			Lever no. 3: Power and control through imperialism and nationalism
				The case of Cyprus: Imperialism through power
				The case of the UK: Nationalism through power
		1.4 Let the journey begin
		References
	Chapter 2: Challenging race: Let’s talk about race when we talk about race
		2.1 Race matters
		2.2 Slavery revisited
			Realisation no. 1: Slavery still exists
			Realisation no. 2: Disadvantaged thinking
			Realisation no. 3: The grouping of victimisation and injustice
		2.3 Concluding thoughts
		References
	Chapter 3: Challenging justice: The lawful and the fair
		3.1 Introduction
		3.2 Δικαιοσύνη: The lawful and the fair
		3.3 The illusions of justice
			Representation of justice by the media: Case study no. 1
			Representation of justice by the courts: Case study no. 2
			Representation of justice by the courts and media: Case study no. 3
		3.4 Finding hope
		3.5 Preparing for restorative justice
		References
	Chapter 4: Challenging restorative justice: A painful biopower
		4.1 Aristotelian restorative justice (επανορθωτικόν δίκαιον)
		4.2 Restorative justice is morally problematic
		4.3 Placing restorative justice theory
		4.4 Restorative pain: The philosophical foundations of restorative justice
			Seeing the infliction of pain in an awakened state of mind
			Deconstructing pain for restorative justice
			The philosophical premise of restorative justice
		4.5 Final reflections
		References
Part II: Rebalancing power for justice: Mermaids and sirens
	Chapter 5: Fault lines, mermaids and sirens: Power-interest battles within the restorative justice social movement
		5.1 Different visions of restorative justice
			Fault line 1
			Fault line 2
			Fault line 3
			Fault line 4
			Fault line 5
			Fault line 6
		5.2 Power-interest battles within the restorative movement
		5.3 A distracted restorative justice movement
			Opportunity for restorative justice no. 1: Missed?
			Opportunity for restorative justice no. 2: Missed?
			Opportunity for restorative justice no. 3: Missed?
		5.4 Moving forward restorative justice as a social movement
		References
	Chapter 6: The Trojan horses of race and power
		6.1 The paradox of restorative justice
		6.2 Three Trojan horses of race and power
			Trojan horse no. 1: Where is our diversity data?
			Trojan horse no. 2: Lost in translation
			Trojan horse no. 3: Money talks
		6.3 Moving things forward for restorative justice and race
		References
	Chapter 7: Power, fear and security: The terrorist within
		7.1 The politics of believe to belong
		7.2 Facing the truth
			Truth no. 1
			Truth no. 2
			Truth no. 3
			Truth no. 4
			Truth no. 5
			Truth no. 6
		7.3 Concluding thoughts
		References
Part III: Restoring peace: Back on track
	Chapter 8: The fallacy of one justice and a consensual justice model restrained by human rights
		8.1 Τα πάντα ρεί και ουδέν μένει: A different Zeitgeist
		8.2 Human rights and restorative justice aligned
		8.3 Learning to live with two forms of justice and restorative justice
			Structured justice and restorative justice
			Unstructured justice and restorative justice
		8.4 Next steps: Learning to share power with justice users
		References
	Chapter 9: Restoring power in justice and restorative justice: What parties in conflict really want
		9.1 Returning power to the parties
		9.2 Fieldwork findings from Europe
			Let’s talk about victims when we talk about victims
			State-based vs. community-based victim support and restorative justice services
			Standards and standardisation
		9.3 Fieldwork findings from the UK
			Findings from the fieldwork with UK victims
				Victim engagement
				Victims’ understanding of restorative justice
				Do victims want restorative justice?
				What do victims expect from restorative justice?
			Findings from the fieldwork with UK offenders
			Findings from the fieldwork with UK experts
		9.4 Fieldwork findings from London
			Do victims and offenders know about restorative justice?
			Are victims and offenders being offered restorative justice?
			Do victims and offenders opt for restorative justice if it is offered?
			How satisfied are victims and offenders with restorative justice and why?
			Is there an unmet demand for restorative justice and what does this look like?
			What are the reasons that victims and offenders may reject restorative justice?
			What do victims and offenders value the most in the pursuit of justice?
			What does an ideal restorative justice look like?
			Key themes emerging from the follow-up interviews
		9.5 Critical reflections
		Appendix A: Research methodology and sampling for EU-wide project
		Appendix B: Research methodology and sampling for the UK project
		Appendix C: Research methodology and sampling for the London project
			Victims’ demographics
			Offenders’ demographics
			Follow-up victims’ interviews and focus group
			The analysis method
		References
	Chapter 10: Restorative justice policy and practice: A guide free from power abuse
		10.1 Undertakings for restorative justice
			The end of definitions
			The end of abolitionism
			Ending the bottom-up or top-down divide
			Understanding campaigning for restorative justice
			Getting our values language right
		10.2 A guide for research, policy and practice
		10.3 Two self-empowering toolkits
			Victim self-assessment toolkit
				Practitioner’s checklist
			Offender self-assessment toolkit
				Practitioner’s checklist
		References
Part IV: Case studies of power and restoration: Possibilities in action
	Preamble to the case studies
		References
	Case study no. 1: Power and child sexual abuse – England
	Case study no. 2: Power through bullying – England
	Case study no. 3: Power through rape – Denmark
	Case study no. 4: Power through race – USA
	Case study no. 5: The power of taking life, the power of owning restorative justice – USA
	Case study no. 6: Four restorative practices in Queensland – Australia
		References
	Case study no. 7: Parental power and culture – MALAYSIA
	Case study no. 8: The “powerful” victim paedophile – USA
	Case study no. 9: Race, gender and power – USA
		References
	Case study no. 10: Power in family relationships – Greece
	Case study no. 11: The power of protecting my turf – Greece
	Case study no. 12: Power in whiteness – England
	Case study no. 13: Race, gender and family relationships – USA
	Case study no. 14: Regaining power through forgiveness – USA
	Case study no. 15: Power imbalance in juvenile justice delivery: My experience as a prison social worker – Nigeria
	Case study no. 16: Power and policing – USA
	Case study no. 17: A power and child sexualisation – Lithuania
	Case study no. 18: Power imbalance and intimate partner violence – India
		The problem
		The intervention
		Conclusion
	Case study no. 19: Sun, sea, sex and the new forms of slavery – SPAIN
	Case study no. 20: Climate change, power abuses and the plight of refugees – SPAIN
		References
	Case study no. 21: Digital enslavement, online dating apps and abuse – SPAIN
		References
	Case study no. 22: Power abuse of queer, indigenous and racialized youth in the Global North – CANADA
		How practitioners can trans-form dialogue with queer, BIPOC youth
		Self-governance and theory-based dialogue
		References
	Case study no. 23: English nationalism: Deindustrialisation and powerlessness – ENGLAND
		References
Index




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