Language policy and transitional justice: rights and reconciliation

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Language policy and transitional justice: rights and reconciliation Gareth Price1  Received: 20 July 2019 / Accepted: 2 August 2019 © Springer Nature B.V. 2019

Abstract Transitional justice (TJ) scenarios are where a society is moving from war to peace or from authoritarianism to democracy. A key goal of TJ is to balance atoning for past abuses of human rights with creating the conditions for social and political stability in the future, and this requires avoiding forms of “victor’s justice” whereby one system of oppression is simply replaced with another. TJ questions, then, are not merely about justice, but about justice and prudence: not merely whom to punish and by what authority, but to what ends (Arthur in Hum Rights Q 31:321–367, 2009). These ends, according to de Greiff (Nomos 51:31–77, 2012), are reconciliation and democratization, achieved primarily via the recognition of wrongdoings and victims, and the rebuilding of civic trust. It is questionable, therefore, whether the emphasis on legality and punishment should be the primary mechanism of TJ or, as reported by Roht-Arriaza (in: Roht-Arriaza, Mariezcurrena (eds) Transitional justice in the twenty-first century: beyond truth versus justice, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, p 1, 2006) suggests, more emphasis should be placed on education, identities, and culture. By extension, TJ scenarios may have sociolinguistic dimensions, particularly where linguistic repression has been a cipher for broader political repression, and where abuses of human rights are linked to abuses of language-based rights. In this article, I argue that language policy reform has been empirically a crucial site for the operation of TJ, but that the relationship between the two has so far been undertheorized. I thus present a theoretical framework of TJfocused language policy that is applied broadly to Sri Lanka, South Africa, Taiwan, and indigenous residential schools in Canada as case studies. I conclude by calling for scholars to further develop this framework, so that it can be used by activists, practitioners, and policymakers in real-world contexts. Keywords  Language policy · Transitional justice · Language rights · Reconciliation

* Gareth Price [email protected] 1



Linguistics Program, Duke University, 316 Languages Building, Box 90259, Durham, NC 27708‑0259, USA

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Introduction Contemporary examples such as Darfur, Rwanda, Haiti, and Cambodia, and older ones, such as Chile, Argentina, or the Philippines, are transitional contexts, where a society is moving from war to peace or from authoritarianism to democracy, and addressing previous systematic abuses of human rights as a crucial part of the process. Associated with these socio-political transitions are calls for justice: the need to lay the past to rest and provide meaningful relief to victims, and—at least in some conceptions (Nagy 2008; cf. Roht-Arriaza 2006: 2)—to fashion a peaceful, just, and stable society in the future. Prosecution of perpetrators, truth commissions, re