Once considered implausible, the demand to make amends for old wrongs has become a pressing contemporary problem. Legal expert Professor Mayo Moran utilizes landmark cases to demonstrate how innovative private law claims have begun to employ reparative justice to frame claims to redress grievous historical wrongs, tracing the evolution from early Holocaust litigation and transitional justice to contemporary claims involving colonial violence, slavery, and institutional abuse.
Drawing on ground-breaking cases involving looted art, institutional child abuse, and involuntary sterilization, the book highlights the shifting understanding of the past. It examines the pivotal role of private law in the effort to rectify historical injustices. Post-Holocaust legal developments, the rise of transitional justice, and the strategic use of domestic civil law by human rights advocates helped to shape these novel redress claims. Moved by survivor narratives and in the face of evolving legal norms, courts, governments, and institutions all began to consider how to respond to grievous old wrongs.
Moran analyzes the design of redress mechanisms and the key role of legal practitioners, showing how jurisdictions have responded through settlements and compensation programs. Using a wide array of examples, Moran outlines the pitfalls and opportunities of law as a tool for addressing past wrongs.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Mayo Moran is the inaugural Rosalie and Irving Abella Chair in Justice and Equality the Faculty of Law, University of Toronto. She was the first woman dean of that faculty and went on to be Provost of Trinity College, University of Toronto. Her awards include the Law Society Medal, the YWCA's Woman of Distinction Award, and the President's Impact Award.
Her work focuses on redress for historic injustice. She co-founded the Restitution Dialogues which addresses the 'restitution revolution', chaired the committee that oversaw the multi-billion-dollar compensation process for residential school survivors, and served on the working group to improve Germany's Holocaust restitution process.
She teaches private law and "Ten Cases that Changed the World".
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
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Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. Once considered implausible, the demand to make amends for old wrongs has become a pressing contemporary problem. Legal expert Professor Mayo Moran utilizes landmark cases to demonstrate how innovative private law claims have begun to employ reparative justice to frame claims to redress grievous historical wrongs, tracing the evolution from early Holocaust litigation and transitional justice to contemporary claims involving colonial violence, slavery, andinstitutional abuse.Drawing on ground-breaking cases involving looted art, institutional child abuse, and involuntary sterilization, the book highlights the shifting understanding of thepast. It examines the pivotal role of private law in the effort to rectify historical injustices. Post-Holocaust legal developments, the rise of transitional justice, and the strategic use of domestic civil law by human rights advocates helped to shape these novel redress claims. Moved by survivor narratives and in the face of evolving legal norms, courts, governments, and institutions all began to consider how to respond to grievous old wrongs.Moran analyzes the designof redress mechanisms and the key role of legal practitioners, showing how jurisdictions have responded through settlements and compensation programs. Using a wide array of examples, Moran outlines thepitfalls and opportunities of law as a tool for addressing past wrongs. From the Holocaust to eugenics, colonial violence, slavery and looted belongings, victims of historical wrongs are demanding justice. Making Amends for Historic Wrongs charts the rise of redress for historic injustice, pointing to key lessons for the future. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780190927264
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Hardcover. Condition: new. Hardcover. Once considered implausible, the demand to make amends for old wrongs has become a pressing contemporary problem. Legal expert Professor Mayo Moran utilizes landmark cases to demonstrate how innovative private law claims have begun to employ reparative justice to frame claims to redress grievous historical wrongs, tracing the evolution from early Holocaust litigation and transitional justice to contemporary claims involving colonial violence, slavery, andinstitutional abuse.Drawing on ground-breaking cases involving looted art, institutional child abuse, and involuntary sterilization, the book highlights the shifting understanding of thepast. It examines the pivotal role of private law in the effort to rectify historical injustices. Post-Holocaust legal developments, the rise of transitional justice, and the strategic use of domestic civil law by human rights advocates helped to shape these novel redress claims. Moved by survivor narratives and in the face of evolving legal norms, courts, governments, and institutions all began to consider how to respond to grievous old wrongs.Moran analyzes the designof redress mechanisms and the key role of legal practitioners, showing how jurisdictions have responded through settlements and compensation programs. Using a wide array of examples, Moran outlines thepitfalls and opportunities of law as a tool for addressing past wrongs. From the Holocaust to eugenics, colonial violence, slavery and looted belongings, victims of historical wrongs are demanding justice. Making Amends for Historic Wrongs charts the rise of redress for historic injustice, pointing to key lessons for the future. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780190927264
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