TY - JOUR
T1 - The politics of being sorry
T2 - The Greensboro truth process and efforts at restorative justice
AU - Inwood, Joshua
N1 - Funding Information:
I want to thank the three anonymous reviewers for a timely, thoughtful, and thorough review of this manuscript. In addition, I want to thank Sarah Inwood, Jill Williams, Micheline Van Riemsdijk, and Melanie Barron for their comments on earlier drafts of this manuscript. Finally, I want to especially thank Michael Brown for his patience during the editorial process. All omissions are my own. This research is funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation.
PY - 2012/9
Y1 - 2012/9
N2 - This paper examines the Greensboro Truth and Reconciliation Commission (GTRC) to better understand the way the truth process in Greensboro, North Carolina intersects with conceptions of restorative justice and geographic understandings of the 'right to the city.' The GTRC was a grassroots truth process focused on a shooting of labor organizers in 1979 by Ku Klux Klan and American Nazi Party Members and the complicity of local officials in the violence. In 2006, the GTRC released its report to the citizens of Greensboro and its recommendations for the city touched off a contentious debate. Using a multi-method qualitative approach-including open-ended interviews and archival research-I argue the GTRC process engages with notions of right to the city activism that challenges the right to the city literature to focus on broader discussions of racism, activism, and white privilege that emerges from critical race scholarship and contributes to the growth of robust, multiracial anticapitalist coalitions; an approach to scholarship on the right to the city that has broad academic purchase for social geography and urban political engagement in general.
AB - This paper examines the Greensboro Truth and Reconciliation Commission (GTRC) to better understand the way the truth process in Greensboro, North Carolina intersects with conceptions of restorative justice and geographic understandings of the 'right to the city.' The GTRC was a grassroots truth process focused on a shooting of labor organizers in 1979 by Ku Klux Klan and American Nazi Party Members and the complicity of local officials in the violence. In 2006, the GTRC released its report to the citizens of Greensboro and its recommendations for the city touched off a contentious debate. Using a multi-method qualitative approach-including open-ended interviews and archival research-I argue the GTRC process engages with notions of right to the city activism that challenges the right to the city literature to focus on broader discussions of racism, activism, and white privilege that emerges from critical race scholarship and contributes to the growth of robust, multiracial anticapitalist coalitions; an approach to scholarship on the right to the city that has broad academic purchase for social geography and urban political engagement in general.
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U2 - 10.1080/14649365.2012.710914
DO - 10.1080/14649365.2012.710914
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84865832745
SN - 1464-9365
VL - 13
SP - 607
EP - 624
JO - Social and Cultural Geography
JF - Social and Cultural Geography
IS - 6
ER -