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003 OSt
005 20190211154230.0
008 020925s2005 xx ||||gr |0|| 0 eng d
100 1 _aBOOTH, W. James
_91297
245 1 0 _aThe unforgotten :
_bmemories of justice
260 _c2001
520 3 _aJustice is, in part, a form of remembrance: memory occupies a vital place an the heart of justice and its struggle to keep the victims, crimes, and perpetrators among the unforgotten. I argue that this memory-justice at once informs core judicial practices and ranges byond then in a manner that leaves judicial closure incomplete. It reminds us of a duty to keep crimes and their victms from the oblivion of forgetting, of a duty to restore, preserve, and acknowledge the just order of the world. Yet, in the shadow of remebrance, other human goods can wither, doods located in the temporal registers of present and futue. This latter lesson is important, but it is one with which we are familiar. I emphasize anohter, with which we are perhaps less at home: the intimacy of memory`s bond with justice, no as obsessional or as a syndrome, but as a face of justice itself
773 0 8 _tAmerican Political Science Review
_g95, 4, p. 777-792
_d, 2001
_w
942 _cS
998 _a20020925
_bCassio
_cCassio
998 _a20060512
_b1200^b
_cQuiteria
999 _aConvertido do Formato PHL
_bPHL2MARC21 1.1
_c7387
_d7387
041 _aeng