Violence and Reconciliation in Colombia: The Personal and the Contextual

In the aftermath of war and large-scale violence, how can nations function as societies? How can people learn to live together again? Or, have the foundations of trust, civility, and predictability upon which fully functioning societies depend been irrevocably damaged? If we want to understand why r...

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Main Author: James Meernik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-12-01
Series:Journal of Politics in Latin America
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1866802X19894471
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spelling doaj-ab45c4ce09f24ec8afafbae76ed84dcb2020-11-25T03:20:49ZengSAGE PublishingJournal of Politics in Latin America1866-802X1868-48902019-12-011110.1177/1866802X19894471Violence and Reconciliation in Colombia: The Personal and the ContextualJames MeernikIn the aftermath of war and large-scale violence, how can nations function as societies? How can people learn to live together again? Or, have the foundations of trust, civility, and predictability upon which fully functioning societies depend been irrevocably damaged? If we want to understand why reconciliation does or does not take root, we must begin by understanding the perspectives and interests of individuals. In this article, I develop such a model of individual attitudes towards reconciliation. In particular, I analyse the determinants of individual beliefs about reconciliation, with a particular emphasis on the impact of violence in Colombia. I combine survey data from the Latin American Public Opinion Project survey on individual attitudes regarding reconciliation with data on political violence to measure the extent to which individuals live in environments characterised by violence and how this shapes their opinions about reconciliation.https://doi.org/10.1177/1866802X19894471
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author James Meernik
spellingShingle James Meernik
Violence and Reconciliation in Colombia: The Personal and the Contextual
Journal of Politics in Latin America
author_facet James Meernik
author_sort James Meernik
title Violence and Reconciliation in Colombia: The Personal and the Contextual
title_short Violence and Reconciliation in Colombia: The Personal and the Contextual
title_full Violence and Reconciliation in Colombia: The Personal and the Contextual
title_fullStr Violence and Reconciliation in Colombia: The Personal and the Contextual
title_full_unstemmed Violence and Reconciliation in Colombia: The Personal and the Contextual
title_sort violence and reconciliation in colombia: the personal and the contextual
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Journal of Politics in Latin America
issn 1866-802X
1868-4890
publishDate 2019-12-01
description In the aftermath of war and large-scale violence, how can nations function as societies? How can people learn to live together again? Or, have the foundations of trust, civility, and predictability upon which fully functioning societies depend been irrevocably damaged? If we want to understand why reconciliation does or does not take root, we must begin by understanding the perspectives and interests of individuals. In this article, I develop such a model of individual attitudes towards reconciliation. In particular, I analyse the determinants of individual beliefs about reconciliation, with a particular emphasis on the impact of violence in Colombia. I combine survey data from the Latin American Public Opinion Project survey on individual attitudes regarding reconciliation with data on political violence to measure the extent to which individuals live in environments characterised by violence and how this shapes their opinions about reconciliation.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1866802X19894471
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