PubPol 495.001 Policy Seminar: Apologies | Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy
 
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PubPol 495

PubPol 495.001 Policy Seminar: Apologies

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Level
Undergraduate
Term
Fall 2024
Session
Fall 2024
Course Section
001
U-M Course Number
26909
Credit Hours
4
Class Size
22

PUBPOL 495 (Policy Seminar) is for students currently enrolled in the Public Policy Undergraduate Program only, no exceptions. Enrollment is by permission only.

What are public official apologies? How are official public apologies related to the complex politics of difficult social questions of national democratic membership, memory and constitution? How national dialogues on reparations are mediated and publicly articulated over time shapes not only nation state but also how members, groups and citizens see themselves in relation to each other. How do individuals, communities, nations and states mediate, acknowledge, remember, deny or ignore their violent national pasts and conflicts? What has been the role of transitional justice mechanisms such as truth commissions and acts of official public apology in shaping reparative frameworks as part of the democratic state’s quest for greater social cohesion after conflict? Why is it important to understand how the intersecting structural relations and imbalances of power, domination and subordination inherent to conflict dynamics can be addressed through national public policy and reparative frameworks? What are the historical, social, economic and policy challenges faced by states after extended periods of administrative violence and internal conflicts. How do the politics inherent to collective, institutional, group and collective interests strategically influence the ways in which the policy frameworks and corresponding social, political and economic outcomes are resolved politically? These national membership questions remain a constant part of the legal, political, moral, historical and national dialogue constituting the current national public policy frameworks which in turn affect important questions and conflicts on reparative, social, administrative justice and the meaning of human rights. To address these questions this comparative public policy seminar will explore the currency and economics of transitional justice mechanisms, reparative processes and public official apologies in South Africa, New Zealand, Australia, Canada and the USA.

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