Legitimacy,citizenship and state redress |
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Authors: | Stephen Winter |
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Affiliation: | Department of Political Studies , University of Auckland , Auckland, New Zealand |
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Abstract: | This article explores how state redress programmes work to legitimate the state. The primary thesis concerns how state redress aims to restructure citizenship identity. This restructuring enables civic identification by victims of state wrongdoing which in turn enables greater legitimacy. Consequently, redress constitutes a movement by the state from lesser to greater legitimacy. The article illustrates the legitimating thesis by examining two Canadian responses to state wrongdoing with regard to indigenous peoples, Gathering Strength (1998) and the Indian Residential Schools Settlement Agreement (Indian Residential Schools Adjudication Secretariat). This context provides material for contrasting the legitimating thesis with a competing approach – redress as ‘therapy’. |
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Keywords: | legitimacy citizenship indigenous peoples reconciliation redress Canada |
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