Spotlight on Chile : from social protest to reforming rights : understanding Chile’s ongoing transition (Podcast)
- Author
- Tine Destrooper (UGent) and Marit de Haan (UGent)
- Organization
- Project
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- VICTPART (Righting Victim Participation in Transitional Justice - VictPart)
- Victims’ narratives of the Chilean military dictatorship: has justice been done? An analysis of victim participation, needs and perceptions of justice in the aftermath of the dictatorship.
- Abstract
- On the 25th of October 2020, an overwhelming majority of Chilean citizens (78%) voted in favor of redrafting the constitution, following a year of protests. Many believe the constitution of 1980 is withholding Chile from fully leaving behind its past of military dictatorship. Some even call it ‘the constitution of Pinochet’. The referendum was organized in an attempt to meet the demands of protesters that took the streets in October 2019. When Chile initiated its transition to democracy 30 years ago following 17 years of military dictatorship, the case soon became known as a ‘paradigmatic’ case of transitional justice. It is often cited as a successful transition from authoritarian rule to democracy, because of its classical application of transitional justice mechanisms. However, the slogan ‘It’s not 30 pesos, it’s 30 years’, which was often expressed by protesters reflects how the legacy of the dictatorship continues to affect the present. This context begs the question of whether this transition is actually as ‘finished’ as generally assumed, or rather ongoing. In this episode, we talk to Loreto López, a social anthropologist and postdoctoral researcher at the Program for the Social Psychology of Memory of the Universidad de Chile. We talk about what the process of constitutional reform will look like, and what this change of the constitution means within the broader transitional justice framework. Loreto argues that we should not only focus on the victims of human rights violations and start asking questions about the broader Chilean society. The reform of the constitution is just “going to be a start, the beginning”. What else is needed to adopt a broader culture of human rights in the Chilean context, and what could be the role of public memory in that complex process? Loreto López is a social anthropologist at the Program for the Social Psychology of Memory of the Universidad de Chile. Her expertise is collective memory and Chile’s recent past of military dictatorship.
- Keywords
- HRC, Human Rights Law, Transitional Justice, Victim participation, international criminal justice, Chile
Downloads
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S02E03 Spotlight-on-Chile.mp3
- full text (Published version)
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- 40.74 MB
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S02E03 Transcript Spotlight-on-Chile-1.pdf
- full text (Published version)
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- 10.07 MB
Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8708870
- MLA
- Destrooper, Tine, and Marit de Haan. “Spotlight on Chile : From Social Protest to Reforming Rights : Understanding Chile’s Ongoing Transition (Podcast).” Justice Visions, vol. Season 2, no. Episode 3, Justice Visions Research Group Ghent University, 2020.
- APA
- Destrooper, T., & de Haan, M. (2020). Spotlight on Chile : from social protest to reforming rights : understanding Chile’s ongoing transition (Podcast). Ghent: Justice Visions Research Group Ghent University.
- Chicago author-date
- Destrooper, Tine, and Marit de Haan. 2020. “Spotlight on Chile : From Social Protest to Reforming Rights : Understanding Chile’s Ongoing Transition (Podcast).” Justice Visions. Ghent: Justice Visions Research Group Ghent University.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Destrooper, Tine, and Marit de Haan. 2020. “Spotlight on Chile : From Social Protest to Reforming Rights : Understanding Chile’s Ongoing Transition (Podcast).” Justice Visions. Ghent: Justice Visions Research Group Ghent University.
- Vancouver
- 1.Destrooper T, de Haan M. Spotlight on Chile : from social protest to reforming rights : understanding Chile’s ongoing transition (Podcast). Vol. Season 2, Justice Visions. Ghent: Justice Visions Research Group Ghent University; 2020.
- IEEE
- [1]T. Destrooper and M. de Haan, “Spotlight on Chile : from social protest to reforming rights : understanding Chile’s ongoing transition (Podcast),” Justice Visions, vol. Season 2, no. Episode 3. Justice Visions Research Group Ghent University, Ghent, 2020.
@misc{8708870, abstract = {{On the 25th of October 2020, an overwhelming majority of Chilean citizens (78%) voted in favor of redrafting the constitution, following a year of protests. Many believe the constitution of 1980 is withholding Chile from fully leaving behind its past of military dictatorship. Some even call it ‘the constitution of Pinochet’. The referendum was organized in an attempt to meet the demands of protesters that took the streets in October 2019. When Chile initiated its transition to democracy 30 years ago following 17 years of military dictatorship, the case soon became known as a ‘paradigmatic’ case of transitional justice. It is often cited as a successful transition from authoritarian rule to democracy, because of its classical application of transitional justice mechanisms. However, the slogan ‘It’s not 30 pesos, it’s 30 years’, which was often expressed by protesters reflects how the legacy of the dictatorship continues to affect the present. This context begs the question of whether this transition is actually as ‘finished’ as generally assumed, or rather ongoing. In this episode, we talk to Loreto López, a social anthropologist and postdoctoral researcher at the Program for the Social Psychology of Memory of the Universidad de Chile. We talk about what the process of constitutional reform will look like, and what this change of the constitution means within the broader transitional justice framework. Loreto argues that we should not only focus on the victims of human rights violations and start asking questions about the broader Chilean society. The reform of the constitution is just “going to be a start, the beginning”. What else is needed to adopt a broader culture of human rights in the Chilean context, and what could be the role of public memory in that complex process? Loreto López is a social anthropologist at the Program for the Social Psychology of Memory of the Universidad de Chile. Her expertise is collective memory and Chile’s recent past of military dictatorship.}}, author = {{Destrooper, Tine and de Haan, Marit}}, keywords = {{HRC,Human Rights Law,Transitional Justice,Victim participation,international criminal justice,Chile}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{Episode 3}}, publisher = {{Justice Visions Research Group Ghent University}}, series = {{Justice Visions}}, title = {{Spotlight on Chile : from social protest to reforming rights : understanding Chile’s ongoing transition (Podcast)}}, url = {{https://justicevisions.org/podcast/spotlight-on-chile/}}, volume = {{Season 2}}, year = {{2020}}, }