Does the U.S. Need a Truth and Reconciliation Commission?: A Philosophical Investigation

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Does the U.S. Need a Truth and Reconciliation Commission?: A Philosophical Investigation
Abstract
Written from the perspective of a philosopher and African immigrant, this book makes a forceful moral argument for the need for a Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) in the United States to address the long history of injustice to African-Americans. It shows that a TRC—similar to those established in South Africa and Chile—would rescue the ideals embodied in the U.S. Constitution while expanding their promise. Rejecting more recent views of the country’s founding as an embodiment of incorrigible racial oppression, Olúfẹmi Táíwò sees in the U.S. Constitution, and the original utopia that was at its foundation, the best available means for achieving liberty and justice. But he simultaneously shows how only a TRC can successfully open the path to moving the U.S. past its long legacy of anti-black racism in particular and racial oppression, generally, towards a more perfect union. Written with an immigrant’s love of his new homeland but a clear-eyed view of its major shortcomings, the book rejects the idea of American exceptionalism in prescribing a solution that has worked elsewhere.
Publisher
Routledge
Date
2023-06-00
Language
English
Short Title
Does the U.S. Need a Truth and Reconciliation Commission?
Accessed
18/06/2023, 23:22
Rights
Reconciliation
Extra
United States of America
Citation
Táíwò, O. (2023). Does the U.S. Need a Truth and Reconciliation Commission?: A Philosophical Investigation. Routledge. https://www.routledge.com/Does-the-US-Need-a-Truth-and-Reconciliation-Commission-A-Philosophical/Taiwo/p/book/9781032151762