The SA Civil War No One Anticipates
By Ashanti Kunene Much has been written about the high [...]
By Ashanti Kunene Much has been written about the high [...]
By Stan Henkeman “Out beyond ideas of wrongdoing and right [...]
IJR was asked by UNDP and UNMISS on behalf of [...]
There is a growing consensus that reconciliation without economic [...]
The Institute for Justice and Reconciliation (IJR) pledges solidarity with the people of Kenya ahead of the elections on 8th August 2017. Since 2012, IJR has been working with key governmental and civil society actors in Kenya to promote and support peace-building and reconciliation initiatives
In honour of the late statesman, a team of IJR [...]
IJR CALLS ON SA SPECIAL ENVOY TO SOUTH SUDAN, DEPUTY [...]
Intergroup marriages are considered an important measure of the dissolution of social and cultural barriers, therefore of social and cultural integration. Despite coming from different backgrounds, partners in intergroup (here interracial) marriages are likely to share some common values and aspirations. These elements are seen to be enabling of social cohesion in multicultural societies. Elnari Potgieter, Project Leader for the South Africa Reconciliation Barometer at IJR, further notes that attitudes towards interracial marriages are of importance when considering intergroup marriages as a measure of integration.
The Institute for Justice and Reconciliation (IJR) has added a [...]
It has been over 100 years since Du Bois first described the effects of white domination and supremacy on the black mind. He reflected on how it affects a “double consciousness” as a peculiar sensation. The sense of always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others, of measuring one’s soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity (Du Bois 1989). Ashanti Kunene, intern for the Sustained Dialogue Programme shares her thoughts on the intersections of oppression.