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Staci Muraske
Sociology 455
2 May 2014
How is law and, by extension, justice challenged in the aftermath of political violence, disaster,
and mass killing? What are the special problems disaster and catastrophe (political and
“natural”) pose for the law? How might law and justice better attend to the concerns of those
most affected by political violence, crimes of atrocity, and catastrophe? Do these problems
remind you of other issues and readings in the course? What will it take for bereaved individuals
and communities to engage in meaningful “memory work” and build a new life?
It has been said that law is there to speak through people’s passions. But what happens
when the fine line between speaking through people’s passions and protecting people through
justice is blurred? What does one do when the law no longer can help speak for them and justice
is no longer there to protect those who need it? The eyes of the law are different amongst all
those who look at it. Law is challenged; it ratifies problems, and is attentive. But, on what level?
Law and justice are viewed very differently once the aftermath of political violence, disaster,
catastrophe, and crimes of atrocity come into play. People want to believe the law is there to
speak for them, to support them, and show them the justice they deserve. However, law and
justice are much more complex than that, especially after the acts of political violence, disaster,
catastrophe, and crimes of atrocity. The aftermath of these events are when the true colors of the
law are shown. It’s when people start to recognize what the law does and does not do for them.
It’s when people recognize whether or not justice should be served, whether or not there should
be accountability and blame, whether or not people should forgive and forget, or forgive and not
forget and move on in order to build a new life. There are several readings and two
documentaries I will be referring to in order to support the role of law and justice within the
events previously mentioned.
To begin, the law and justice are challenged in several ways due to the aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina, the Ugandan genocides, and the political violence faced in Peru. The
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina left the city of New Orleans in deep devastation. Spike Lee’s
documentary, When the Levees Broke, gives viewers an inside look at the catastrophe that was
Hurricane Katrina. The people of New Orleans were outraged that the levees, supposedly
protecting their city, were designed so poorly by the United States Army Corps of Engineering
that they were not able to withstand anything more than a category 3 hurricane (Lee). Because of
this the levees easily broke, causing the entire city to flood tremendously. One of the main
reasons the government did not build levees that could withstand a higher category hurricane was
because they believed it would be too expensive (Lee), but what the government did not account
for was how much more expensive it would be to rebuild a whole city after a devastation like
Hurricane Katrina. The problem that arises and challenges the law is why did the government not
spend the money to protect the people of New Orleans against high category hurricanes? And
after the devastation, why did the government not account for the flood damage as hurricane
damage? Instead, everything that was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina was initially only
accounted for if a person had flood insurance, and if they did not then their possessions and their
homes could not be properly taken care of and fixed. This was a main concern for the residents
of New Orleans because most of them did have hurricane damage insurance, but not flood
insurance. Failures were committed at all levels of government before and after this disaster, but
mostly at the Federal level (Lee). Due to this, the law and the justice people believed they
deserved was then challenged by the people of New Orleans, who thought their cities laws were
there to protect them from instances such as this.
When it comes to the Ugandan genocide, Kamari Maxine Clarke’s paper, “Global
Justice, Local Controversies: The International Criminal Court and the Sovereignty of Victims”
shows us how law and justice were challenged through amnesty. Amnesty is defined in three
different ways. One being the formal act of liberating someone, another being a warrant granting
release from punishment for an offense, and the last being a period during which offenders are
exempt from punishment. All three definitions point towards basically allowing a perpetrator not
to be punished for crimes they have committed. Law and justice are challenged in this way
because how does one decide what crimes are and are not eligible for amnesty? Also, why
choose the path of amnesty in the first place? Uganda decides to use amnesty acts and statues
due to their violence ridden past, and as the best way to rebuild their nation (Clarke 142). This
takes us right into the Amnesty Statute of 1987 which the National Resistance Council (NRC)
encouraged various fighting groups and sponsors of insurgency to cease their activities, and
building on this statute was a second Amnesty Act in January 2000 for Ugandans which involved
‘acts of war-like nature in various parts of the country’ to be added into amnesty (Clarke 143).
This means that the crimes against humanity that were committed during the Ugandan genocide
are now added to amnesty. In more detail, the 2000 Act provides that ‘an Amnesty is declared in
respect of any Ugandan who has at any time since the 26th day of January, 1986 engaged or is
engaging in war or armed rebellion against the government of the Republic of Uganda by actual
participation in combat collaborating with the perpetrators of the war or armed rebellion;
committing any other crime in the furtherance of the war or armed rebellion; or assisting or
aiding the conduct or prosecution of the war or armed rebellion (Clarke 143). Now, this is where
the law is challenged, because one would like to think that people who commit crimes like this
should be ultimately punished, and the victim of these crimes should receive justice, somehow.
The problem that occurs is whether or not the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal
Court should pursue investigations and arrests prior to the end of the war in Uganda, or whether
‘in the interest of justice’ he should deem his findings inadmissible and instead support the bid
for peace that would enable the Ugandan government to apply its national legislation, the
Amnesty Act, and indefinitely grant amnesty to these perpetrators of crimes against humanity,
while still applying traditional justice mechanisms to Ugandan paths to justice (Clarke 147).
Either way, law and justice are challenged through whether or not crimes against humanity, and
the people that committed these crimes should receive amnesty.
Furthermore, with the political violence in Peru, Kimberly Theidon’s paper, “Histories of
Innocence” shows readers how law and justice are challenged through memory projects.
Memory projects were put together by assemblies in each community, and were held to discuss
what would be and would not be said to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) when
they arrived to take testimonies on the killings done (Theidon 101). Theidon goes on to say, “I
attended numerous assemblies in which authorities reminded everyone what they had decided to
talk about- which deaths would be discussed and which ones silenced in the interest of yielding a
collective history of innocence” (102). The law and justice are challenged through these memory
projects because the community is deciding what should and should not be discussed based on
how the outcome will make them look as a whole. This puts the victims of these political
violence’s in jeopardy because the whole truth is not coming out in order to help them get justice
for what has been done. Instead, the memory projects focused on “innocent victims”, and the
women were consistently told to be quiet for dear they would “vary the information” (Theidon
104). The women involved in these political violence crimes were raped and often killed; yet
they were never allowed to speak up about it. Because of this, women never got the justice they
deserved due to the trials of these memory projects going awry. Overall, it is seen through the
devastation of Hurricane Katrina, the Ugandan genocides and the political violence in Peru that
law and justice are indeed challenged in the aftermath of these events due to corruption in the
law, and justice not being served properly.
In addition to law and justice being challenged by the aftermath of certain events, there
are also special problems, both political and natural, that disaster and catastrophe pose for the
law. The political problems that are posed for the law are that of accountability and blame. Who
or what should be blamed for this disaster? Who or what should be held accountable? Is it the
government that people should blame? Is it the laws that are suppose to protect people from
catastrophe and disaster that should be blamed? Or is it a natural problem, something that cannot
be controlled, like an act of God. We can refer back to Spike Lee’s documentary; When the
Levees Broke to help us look at whom the victims of Hurricane Katrina wanted to put blame on.
In one sense, Hurricane Katrina can be classified as an act of God because no one could do
anything to prevent that storm from hitting New Orleans. However, the government, both local
and federal, could have built the levees to withstand a higher category hurricane. They could
have spent that extra money to make levees that will protect the people, who live past them, but
instead they took the cheap and easy way out in building them, and for that reason as problem
arises in the law regarding protection.
In Kai Erikson’s book, “Everything in Its Path”, the Buffalo Creek disaster poses
problems for the law based on the conditions of minor and structural force that led to the disaster,
itself. The main problem that caused this flood disaster in Buffalo Creek was how the mine waste
was being disposed. Every time one would dig four tons of coal out of the ground, one would
also dig up a ton or so of “slag” or “gob” and would dispose of these wastes wherever the law of
gravity might suggest, and more often than not, it was the stream at the top of the holler that
received all the waste (Erikson 25). Because they thought they could solve the disposal problem
by pouring the mess into streams, this eventually led to the use of impoundment structures to
help dispose of the excess waste, but all this did was create a dam that not only housed waste, but
now fragments of rood, timber, wedges, ect. All of these problems, and the improper use of the
stream, caused the damn to collapse during a heavy rainfall. A massive stream of black water and
waste that tore through the area then flooded the whole entire town. The problems that this
disaster posed for the law are both political and natural. The political problem that is presented is
why were the miners allowed to dispose of waste in this way? Were there no laws to protect the
streams and the natural reservoirs in the Buffalo Creek area? The natural problem presented to
the law is whether or not this disaster can and should be considered an act of God as well,
something that cannot be controlled by humans. But, because of the way the waste was housed in
the dam on the stream- due to the minors disposing it that way- is what caused the dam to
collapse and flood the town. Regardless, accountability and blame are always going to be
problems posed towards the law whether it is due to political reasoning’s, or natural reasoning’s.
Due to the way law and justice are challenged in the aftermath of political violence,
crimes of atrocity, and catastrophe, as well as the special problems these events pose for the law,
there is always the question of how might law and justice better attend to the concerns of those
most affected by these events? We have seen amnesty acts come into play to protect those who
have wronged others through unspeakable ways, we have seen memory projects control what can
and cannot be said during testimonies, and we have seen the government try to find a way around
protecting its citizens. But, more should be done through the law and justice that can better
attend to the concerns of those affected. For example, in the documentary, Enemies of the
People, the director Sambeth goes to Cambodia to interview some of the people who were
involved in killing fields during the Khmer Rouge. He interviews these people not telling them
of his own family connections to the killings, in hopes of finding out what really happened
during this time. His main concern is that he wants people to know how the killers feel about the
situation now, and how it still affects people who either experienced it, or took part in the
killings. The way that law and justice could better attend to the concerns the victims and their
families have to these killings is to see these people put away, and justice be served to those who
deserve it. With the help of the ICC, the perpetrators who committed these crimes against
humanity should be sentenced, and justice should be served to those who want to put these
crimes behind them.
In addition to perpetrators being rightfully sentenced due to their wrongdoings, trials,
truth commissions, and reparations should be demanded of the law as well. In Martha Minow’s
paper, “Facing History” she talks about how trials for war crimes and atrocities convert the
impulse for revenge into state-managed truth-seeking and punishment and yet depend for the
most part upon symbolism rather than the effectuation of the rule of law (122). Basically, the
effect of the rule of law is not taken into account, and people are not given the rightful
punishment for their actions. She states that the claim, and the hope, is that trials create official
records of the scope of violence and the participants in it, and that guilty verdicts afford public
acknowledgement of what happened, and its utter wrongfulness (Minow 123). If the law and
justice were able to attend to the concern of what actually happened, rather than focusing solely
on memory projects, and only those who are innocent, they would be able to punish these
wrongdoers, rightfully. She states, “Where trials do occur, one hope is the creation of transparent
court records that simply speak the truth to the relevant audiences. This hope depends of the
fairness throughout the proceedings” (Minow 125). This statement helps us realize that trials for
crimes of atrocity are often done in an unfair way. Victims and those affected by these events
should be able to have the law and justice rightfully back them and their concerns up. Minow
says, “For the victimized deserve the acknowledgement of their humanity and the reaffirmation
of the utter wrongfulness of its violation. And bystanders must see a response, and face their own
choices about action and inaction” (146). Kamari Clarke goes on to say in her paper, “Global
Justice, Local Controversies: The International Criminal Court and the Sovereignty of Victims”
that we need to think more precisely about the meaning and enactment of justice and politics in
local contexts- how it should work, whom it should include and whom it excludes. We must
rethink the conditions within which we envisage justice in the first place, and expand the basis
within which we locate political beings (Clarke 158). Basically, in order to attend to the concerns
of those affected by political violence, and crimes of atrocity we need to think more in detail
about what needs to be included, and what does not.
Finally, the way law and justice can better attend to concerns of those who were most
affected by catastrophe is entirely different that the way law and justice attends to the concerns
of political violence and crimes of atrocity. Political violence’s and crimes of atrocity are dealt
with through trials and testimonies, while catastrophe and disaster are dealt with on a more
personal level. Law and justice can only be attentive to the concerns of these victims through
help, whether it is the help of the community, or the help of the government. People that
experience catastrophe, like those of the Buffalo Creek disaster, also experience serious trauma.
Kai Erikson states that there are two types of trauma these people likely experience: individual
and collective. He defined individual trauma, as a blow to the psyche that breaks through ones
defenses so suddenly and with such brutal force that one cannot react to it effectively (Erikson
153) and he defines collective trauma as a blow to the basic tissues of social life that damages the
bonds attaching people together and impairs the prevailing sense of communality (Erikson 154).
Basically, the survivors suffered deep shock due to the death and devastation; they felt alone,
vulnerable, and numb. The community no longer exists as an effective source of support for one
another, because they are all feeling the same way. The way the law and justice could better
attend to their concerns due to the catastrophe would be to provide a way for these people to
move on from their trauma and devastation, perhaps send people out there to help rebuild what
has been lost.
With that being said, it clearly can take a lot for someone to move on from tragic events
such as these, and more often than not people are struggling with how to build a new life, to
forgive and forget, or to forgive and not forget. In Martha Minow’s paper, a journalist named
Tina Rosenberg says, “Nations, like individuals, need to face up to and understand traumatic past
events before they can put them aside and move on to normal life” (Minow 118). Minow goes on
to say that living after genocide, mass atrocity, totalitarian terror, however, makes remembering
and forgetting not just about dealing with the past. The treatment of the past through
remembering and forgetting crucially shapes the present and future for individuals and entire
societies (119). So, in order to build a new life and move on from these events, one has to
understand what happened. It must remain the choice of the survivors whether to grant
forgiveness, or to accept apologies or reparations. The role to accept or reject avenues is
uniquely theirs (Minow 136). It is only up to the survivors to determine how they will engage in
meaningful memory work and build a new life. Some of the memory work might be that of a
monument, where memory is safe in the present and can transmit the memory across generations
(Minow 138). Regardless of how a bereaved individual or community learns to move on, it has
to be done in order to build a new life.
In conclusion, we have gone through every which way law and justice is challenged, the
way events pose problems towards it, how to better attend to concerns, and how to build a new
life based off of living through political violence, disaster, and crimes of atrocity. We have seen
how law and justice are viewed differently in the aftermath of these events, and we have seen
how law does and does not speak for the people who need it. The true colors of the law are
definitely shown in hindsight of these events, once people recognize what the law does and does
not do for them, whether or not justice should be served, whether there should be accountability
and blame, and whether or not people should forgive and forget, or just forgive. Regardless, the
law is there to speak through people’s passions, and justice is there to protect people, and
whether or not the line between the two is blurred, the law remains definite.

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How Political Violence, Disaster and Mass Killing Challenge Law and Justice

  • 1. Staci Muraske Sociology 455 2 May 2014 How is law and, by extension, justice challenged in the aftermath of political violence, disaster, and mass killing? What are the special problems disaster and catastrophe (political and “natural”) pose for the law? How might law and justice better attend to the concerns of those most affected by political violence, crimes of atrocity, and catastrophe? Do these problems remind you of other issues and readings in the course? What will it take for bereaved individuals and communities to engage in meaningful “memory work” and build a new life? It has been said that law is there to speak through people’s passions. But what happens when the fine line between speaking through people’s passions and protecting people through justice is blurred? What does one do when the law no longer can help speak for them and justice is no longer there to protect those who need it? The eyes of the law are different amongst all those who look at it. Law is challenged; it ratifies problems, and is attentive. But, on what level? Law and justice are viewed very differently once the aftermath of political violence, disaster, catastrophe, and crimes of atrocity come into play. People want to believe the law is there to speak for them, to support them, and show them the justice they deserve. However, law and justice are much more complex than that, especially after the acts of political violence, disaster, catastrophe, and crimes of atrocity. The aftermath of these events are when the true colors of the law are shown. It’s when people start to recognize what the law does and does not do for them. It’s when people recognize whether or not justice should be served, whether or not there should be accountability and blame, whether or not people should forgive and forget, or forgive and not forget and move on in order to build a new life. There are several readings and two
  • 2. documentaries I will be referring to in order to support the role of law and justice within the events previously mentioned. To begin, the law and justice are challenged in several ways due to the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, the Ugandan genocides, and the political violence faced in Peru. The aftermath of Hurricane Katrina left the city of New Orleans in deep devastation. Spike Lee’s documentary, When the Levees Broke, gives viewers an inside look at the catastrophe that was Hurricane Katrina. The people of New Orleans were outraged that the levees, supposedly protecting their city, were designed so poorly by the United States Army Corps of Engineering that they were not able to withstand anything more than a category 3 hurricane (Lee). Because of this the levees easily broke, causing the entire city to flood tremendously. One of the main reasons the government did not build levees that could withstand a higher category hurricane was because they believed it would be too expensive (Lee), but what the government did not account for was how much more expensive it would be to rebuild a whole city after a devastation like Hurricane Katrina. The problem that arises and challenges the law is why did the government not spend the money to protect the people of New Orleans against high category hurricanes? And after the devastation, why did the government not account for the flood damage as hurricane damage? Instead, everything that was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina was initially only accounted for if a person had flood insurance, and if they did not then their possessions and their homes could not be properly taken care of and fixed. This was a main concern for the residents of New Orleans because most of them did have hurricane damage insurance, but not flood insurance. Failures were committed at all levels of government before and after this disaster, but mostly at the Federal level (Lee). Due to this, the law and the justice people believed they
  • 3. deserved was then challenged by the people of New Orleans, who thought their cities laws were there to protect them from instances such as this. When it comes to the Ugandan genocide, Kamari Maxine Clarke’s paper, “Global Justice, Local Controversies: The International Criminal Court and the Sovereignty of Victims” shows us how law and justice were challenged through amnesty. Amnesty is defined in three different ways. One being the formal act of liberating someone, another being a warrant granting release from punishment for an offense, and the last being a period during which offenders are exempt from punishment. All three definitions point towards basically allowing a perpetrator not to be punished for crimes they have committed. Law and justice are challenged in this way because how does one decide what crimes are and are not eligible for amnesty? Also, why choose the path of amnesty in the first place? Uganda decides to use amnesty acts and statues due to their violence ridden past, and as the best way to rebuild their nation (Clarke 142). This takes us right into the Amnesty Statute of 1987 which the National Resistance Council (NRC) encouraged various fighting groups and sponsors of insurgency to cease their activities, and building on this statute was a second Amnesty Act in January 2000 for Ugandans which involved ‘acts of war-like nature in various parts of the country’ to be added into amnesty (Clarke 143). This means that the crimes against humanity that were committed during the Ugandan genocide are now added to amnesty. In more detail, the 2000 Act provides that ‘an Amnesty is declared in respect of any Ugandan who has at any time since the 26th day of January, 1986 engaged or is engaging in war or armed rebellion against the government of the Republic of Uganda by actual participation in combat collaborating with the perpetrators of the war or armed rebellion; committing any other crime in the furtherance of the war or armed rebellion; or assisting or aiding the conduct or prosecution of the war or armed rebellion (Clarke 143). Now, this is where
  • 4. the law is challenged, because one would like to think that people who commit crimes like this should be ultimately punished, and the victim of these crimes should receive justice, somehow. The problem that occurs is whether or not the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court should pursue investigations and arrests prior to the end of the war in Uganda, or whether ‘in the interest of justice’ he should deem his findings inadmissible and instead support the bid for peace that would enable the Ugandan government to apply its national legislation, the Amnesty Act, and indefinitely grant amnesty to these perpetrators of crimes against humanity, while still applying traditional justice mechanisms to Ugandan paths to justice (Clarke 147). Either way, law and justice are challenged through whether or not crimes against humanity, and the people that committed these crimes should receive amnesty. Furthermore, with the political violence in Peru, Kimberly Theidon’s paper, “Histories of Innocence” shows readers how law and justice are challenged through memory projects. Memory projects were put together by assemblies in each community, and were held to discuss what would be and would not be said to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) when they arrived to take testimonies on the killings done (Theidon 101). Theidon goes on to say, “I attended numerous assemblies in which authorities reminded everyone what they had decided to talk about- which deaths would be discussed and which ones silenced in the interest of yielding a collective history of innocence” (102). The law and justice are challenged through these memory projects because the community is deciding what should and should not be discussed based on how the outcome will make them look as a whole. This puts the victims of these political violence’s in jeopardy because the whole truth is not coming out in order to help them get justice for what has been done. Instead, the memory projects focused on “innocent victims”, and the women were consistently told to be quiet for dear they would “vary the information” (Theidon
  • 5. 104). The women involved in these political violence crimes were raped and often killed; yet they were never allowed to speak up about it. Because of this, women never got the justice they deserved due to the trials of these memory projects going awry. Overall, it is seen through the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, the Ugandan genocides and the political violence in Peru that law and justice are indeed challenged in the aftermath of these events due to corruption in the law, and justice not being served properly. In addition to law and justice being challenged by the aftermath of certain events, there are also special problems, both political and natural, that disaster and catastrophe pose for the law. The political problems that are posed for the law are that of accountability and blame. Who or what should be blamed for this disaster? Who or what should be held accountable? Is it the government that people should blame? Is it the laws that are suppose to protect people from catastrophe and disaster that should be blamed? Or is it a natural problem, something that cannot be controlled, like an act of God. We can refer back to Spike Lee’s documentary; When the Levees Broke to help us look at whom the victims of Hurricane Katrina wanted to put blame on. In one sense, Hurricane Katrina can be classified as an act of God because no one could do anything to prevent that storm from hitting New Orleans. However, the government, both local and federal, could have built the levees to withstand a higher category hurricane. They could have spent that extra money to make levees that will protect the people, who live past them, but instead they took the cheap and easy way out in building them, and for that reason as problem arises in the law regarding protection. In Kai Erikson’s book, “Everything in Its Path”, the Buffalo Creek disaster poses problems for the law based on the conditions of minor and structural force that led to the disaster, itself. The main problem that caused this flood disaster in Buffalo Creek was how the mine waste
  • 6. was being disposed. Every time one would dig four tons of coal out of the ground, one would also dig up a ton or so of “slag” or “gob” and would dispose of these wastes wherever the law of gravity might suggest, and more often than not, it was the stream at the top of the holler that received all the waste (Erikson 25). Because they thought they could solve the disposal problem by pouring the mess into streams, this eventually led to the use of impoundment structures to help dispose of the excess waste, but all this did was create a dam that not only housed waste, but now fragments of rood, timber, wedges, ect. All of these problems, and the improper use of the stream, caused the damn to collapse during a heavy rainfall. A massive stream of black water and waste that tore through the area then flooded the whole entire town. The problems that this disaster posed for the law are both political and natural. The political problem that is presented is why were the miners allowed to dispose of waste in this way? Were there no laws to protect the streams and the natural reservoirs in the Buffalo Creek area? The natural problem presented to the law is whether or not this disaster can and should be considered an act of God as well, something that cannot be controlled by humans. But, because of the way the waste was housed in the dam on the stream- due to the minors disposing it that way- is what caused the dam to collapse and flood the town. Regardless, accountability and blame are always going to be problems posed towards the law whether it is due to political reasoning’s, or natural reasoning’s. Due to the way law and justice are challenged in the aftermath of political violence, crimes of atrocity, and catastrophe, as well as the special problems these events pose for the law, there is always the question of how might law and justice better attend to the concerns of those most affected by these events? We have seen amnesty acts come into play to protect those who have wronged others through unspeakable ways, we have seen memory projects control what can and cannot be said during testimonies, and we have seen the government try to find a way around
  • 7. protecting its citizens. But, more should be done through the law and justice that can better attend to the concerns of those affected. For example, in the documentary, Enemies of the People, the director Sambeth goes to Cambodia to interview some of the people who were involved in killing fields during the Khmer Rouge. He interviews these people not telling them of his own family connections to the killings, in hopes of finding out what really happened during this time. His main concern is that he wants people to know how the killers feel about the situation now, and how it still affects people who either experienced it, or took part in the killings. The way that law and justice could better attend to the concerns the victims and their families have to these killings is to see these people put away, and justice be served to those who deserve it. With the help of the ICC, the perpetrators who committed these crimes against humanity should be sentenced, and justice should be served to those who want to put these crimes behind them. In addition to perpetrators being rightfully sentenced due to their wrongdoings, trials, truth commissions, and reparations should be demanded of the law as well. In Martha Minow’s paper, “Facing History” she talks about how trials for war crimes and atrocities convert the impulse for revenge into state-managed truth-seeking and punishment and yet depend for the most part upon symbolism rather than the effectuation of the rule of law (122). Basically, the effect of the rule of law is not taken into account, and people are not given the rightful punishment for their actions. She states that the claim, and the hope, is that trials create official records of the scope of violence and the participants in it, and that guilty verdicts afford public acknowledgement of what happened, and its utter wrongfulness (Minow 123). If the law and justice were able to attend to the concern of what actually happened, rather than focusing solely on memory projects, and only those who are innocent, they would be able to punish these
  • 8. wrongdoers, rightfully. She states, “Where trials do occur, one hope is the creation of transparent court records that simply speak the truth to the relevant audiences. This hope depends of the fairness throughout the proceedings” (Minow 125). This statement helps us realize that trials for crimes of atrocity are often done in an unfair way. Victims and those affected by these events should be able to have the law and justice rightfully back them and their concerns up. Minow says, “For the victimized deserve the acknowledgement of their humanity and the reaffirmation of the utter wrongfulness of its violation. And bystanders must see a response, and face their own choices about action and inaction” (146). Kamari Clarke goes on to say in her paper, “Global Justice, Local Controversies: The International Criminal Court and the Sovereignty of Victims” that we need to think more precisely about the meaning and enactment of justice and politics in local contexts- how it should work, whom it should include and whom it excludes. We must rethink the conditions within which we envisage justice in the first place, and expand the basis within which we locate political beings (Clarke 158). Basically, in order to attend to the concerns of those affected by political violence, and crimes of atrocity we need to think more in detail about what needs to be included, and what does not. Finally, the way law and justice can better attend to concerns of those who were most affected by catastrophe is entirely different that the way law and justice attends to the concerns of political violence and crimes of atrocity. Political violence’s and crimes of atrocity are dealt with through trials and testimonies, while catastrophe and disaster are dealt with on a more personal level. Law and justice can only be attentive to the concerns of these victims through help, whether it is the help of the community, or the help of the government. People that experience catastrophe, like those of the Buffalo Creek disaster, also experience serious trauma. Kai Erikson states that there are two types of trauma these people likely experience: individual
  • 9. and collective. He defined individual trauma, as a blow to the psyche that breaks through ones defenses so suddenly and with such brutal force that one cannot react to it effectively (Erikson 153) and he defines collective trauma as a blow to the basic tissues of social life that damages the bonds attaching people together and impairs the prevailing sense of communality (Erikson 154). Basically, the survivors suffered deep shock due to the death and devastation; they felt alone, vulnerable, and numb. The community no longer exists as an effective source of support for one another, because they are all feeling the same way. The way the law and justice could better attend to their concerns due to the catastrophe would be to provide a way for these people to move on from their trauma and devastation, perhaps send people out there to help rebuild what has been lost. With that being said, it clearly can take a lot for someone to move on from tragic events such as these, and more often than not people are struggling with how to build a new life, to forgive and forget, or to forgive and not forget. In Martha Minow’s paper, a journalist named Tina Rosenberg says, “Nations, like individuals, need to face up to and understand traumatic past events before they can put them aside and move on to normal life” (Minow 118). Minow goes on to say that living after genocide, mass atrocity, totalitarian terror, however, makes remembering and forgetting not just about dealing with the past. The treatment of the past through remembering and forgetting crucially shapes the present and future for individuals and entire societies (119). So, in order to build a new life and move on from these events, one has to understand what happened. It must remain the choice of the survivors whether to grant forgiveness, or to accept apologies or reparations. The role to accept or reject avenues is uniquely theirs (Minow 136). It is only up to the survivors to determine how they will engage in meaningful memory work and build a new life. Some of the memory work might be that of a
  • 10. monument, where memory is safe in the present and can transmit the memory across generations (Minow 138). Regardless of how a bereaved individual or community learns to move on, it has to be done in order to build a new life. In conclusion, we have gone through every which way law and justice is challenged, the way events pose problems towards it, how to better attend to concerns, and how to build a new life based off of living through political violence, disaster, and crimes of atrocity. We have seen how law and justice are viewed differently in the aftermath of these events, and we have seen how law does and does not speak for the people who need it. The true colors of the law are definitely shown in hindsight of these events, once people recognize what the law does and does not do for them, whether or not justice should be served, whether there should be accountability and blame, and whether or not people should forgive and forget, or just forgive. Regardless, the law is there to speak through people’s passions, and justice is there to protect people, and whether or not the line between the two is blurred, the law remains definite.