The Ethics Of Reconciling : Learning From Canada’s Truth And Reconciliation Commission
Author(s)
Emily SnyderKeywords
ethicstruth and reconciliation commission
political science
residential schools
Ethics
BJ1-1725
Philosophy. Psychology. Religion
B
DOAJ:Philosophy
DOAJ:Philosophy and Religion
Full record
Show full item recordAbstract
In 2008, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada (TRC) was initiated to address the historical and contemporary injustices and impacts of Indian Residential Schools. Of the many goals of the TRC, I focus on reconciliation and how the TRC aims to promote this through public education and engagement. To explore this, I consider two questions:1) who does the TRC include in the process of reconciliation? And 2) how might I, as someone who is not Indigenous (specifically, as someone who is “white”), be engaged by the TRC?Ethical queries arise which speak to broader concerns about the TRC’s capability to fulfill its public education goals. I raise several concerns about whether the TRC’s plan to convoke the col- lective will result in over-simplifying the process by relying on blunt, poorly defined identity cate- gories that erase the heterogeneity of those residing in Canada, as well as the complexity of the conflict among us. I attempt to situate myself in-between proclamations of “success” or “failure” of the TRC, to better understand what can be learned from contested truths and experiences of uncertainty.Date
2010-11-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:560c1b731ec64063bdd3cc0931cda9791718-9977
https://doaj.org/article/560c1b731ec64063bdd3cc0931cda979