Obstructed Engangement with Past Acts of State Violence Among Urban Youth in Post-Conflict Cambodia
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บทคัดย่อ
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Polomski, D. (2016). Obstructed Engangement with Past Acts of State Violence Among Urban Youth in Post-Conflict Cambodia. วารสารสิทธิและสันติศึกษา, 2(1), 141–166. สืบค้น จาก https://so03.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/HRPS/article/view/163983
บท
บทความวิชาการ
ทัศนะ ข้อคิดเห็น ภาพที่ปรากฏในวารสารเล่มนี้ เป็นความคิดเห็นส่วนตัวของผู้เขียน บรรณาธิการและกองบรรณาธิการไม่จำเป็นต้องเห็นพ้องและไม่ถือเป็นความรับผิดชอบ ลิขสิทธิ์ในบทความเป็นของผู้เขียนและสถาบันสิทธิมนุษยชนและสันติศึกษา มหาวิทยาลัยมหิดล ห้ามผลิตซ้ำ เก็บในระบบที่ค้นหาได้ หรือเผยแพร่ต่อส่วนใดส่วนหนึ่งของวารสารเว้นแต่จะได้รับอนุญาตเป็นลายลักษณ์อักษรจากบรรณาธิการ หรือได้รับอนุญาตตามกฎหมาย หรือตามเงื่อนไขขององค์กรลิขสิทธิ์ภาพถ่ายหรือกราฟฟิก สงวนลิขสิทธิ์ในการนำไปใช้ประโยชน์ในเชิงพาณิชย์ การนำไปใช้โปรดอ้างอิงให้ถูกต้องตามหลักวิชาการ
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Asia-Pacific. 125-156.
Bagot-Jewitt, C., (2011). “Unpicking some threads of remembrance”
In Lest We Forget: Remembrance & Commemoration,
Andrews, M., & Bagot-Jewitt (eds.). New York: The History
Press.
Bickford, L., (2004). Transitional Justice. The Encyclopedia of Geno-
cide and Crimes Against Humanity. Vol. 3.
Brounéus, K., (2009). “Reconciliation and Development”, In Building
a future on peace and justice: studies on transitional justice,
conflict resolution and development : the Nuremberg Decla-
ration on Peace and Justice, Mbos, K., Large, J., & Wierda,
M. (eds.). Berlin: Springer.
Chandler, D., (2008). A history of Cambodia. Boulder Colo: Westview
Press.
Charmaz, K. (2005). “Grounded Theory in the 21st Century: Applica-
tions for Advancing Social Justice Studies. “, In Denzin, N.
K. & Lincoln, Y. S. (Eds), The Sage Handbook of Qualita-
tive Research (3rd ed.), 507-535, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Publications Ltd.
Charmaz, K. (2006). Constructing Grounded Theory: A Practical
Guide Through Qualitative Analysis. London: Sage Publica-
tions.
Ciorciari, J. D., & Heindel, A. H., (2014). “Experiments in Inter-
national Criminal Justice: Lessons from the Khmer Rouge
Tribunal”, Michigan Journal of International Law. 35, 369-
442.
De Greiff, P., (2016). Unacknowledged Past Breeds Manipulation
and Fear. [online] available at:
16 September 2016].
Duggan, C. (2010). “Editorial Note”, In: The International Journal
of Transitional Justice: Special Issue: Transitional Justice on
Trial - Evaluating Its Impact, Vol. 4, 2010, 315-328.
Fischer, M. (2011). “Transitional Justice and Reconciliation:
Theory and Practice”, In: Advancing Conflict Transformation:
The Berghof Handbook II, B. Austin, M. Fischer, H. J.
Giessmann, B. Budrich (eds.), p 405 – 430.
Glaser, B. G., & Strauss A. L. (1967). The Discovery of Ground-
ed Theory: Strategies for Qualitative Research. Chicago:
Aldine Pub. Co.
Khamboly Dy., (2007). A history of Democratic Kampuchea (1975-
1979). Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Documentation Center of
Cambodia.
Khamboly Dy., (2015). Genocide education in Cambodia local ini-
tiatives, global connections.
Kiernan, B., (2003). The demography of genocide in Southeast Asia
The deaths tolls in Cambodia, 1975-79, and East Timor, 1975-
80. In: Critical Asian Studies, 35, 585-597.
Kiernan, B., (2005). The Pol Pot regime: race, power, and genocide
in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, 1975-79.
Mason, J. (2002). Qualitative researching. London: Sage Publica-
tions.
McGonigle, B. N. (2009). Two for the Price of One: Attempts by
the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia to
Combine Retributive and Restorative Justice Principles.
Leiden Journal of International Law. 22, 127-149.
Mersky, M., (2016). Who decides Whether to Remember or Forget?
[online] available at:
Mills, J., Bonner, A., & Francis, K. (2006). “The Development of
Constructivist Grounded Theory” International Journal of
Qualitative Methods, 5(1), [online] available at:
16 September 2016].
Minow, M. (1998). Between Vengeance and Forgiveness. Boston.
Beacon Press.
Nouwen, S. M. H. and Werner, W. G. (2015). “Monopolizing Global
Justice: International Criminal Law as Challenge to Human
Diversity.”, Journal of International Criminal Justice, 13,
157-176.
Olsen, T. D., Payne, L. A., & Reiter, A. G. (2010). The Justice
Balance: when Transitional Justice improves Human Rights
and Democracy. Human Rights Quarterly: a Comparative
and International Journal of the Social Sciences, Philosophy,
and Law, 32, 980-1007.
Osborne, M. E. (2013). Southeast Asia: an introductory history.
Sydney, George Allen & Unwin.
Pham, P. N., Balthazard, M., H’an Sukhum & Vinck, P. (2011). After
the First Trial: A Population-Based Survey on Knowledge
and Perceptions of Justice and the Extraordinary Chambers
in the Courts of Cambodia. Human Rights Center, University
of California, Berkeley.
Ralph, N., Birks, M., & Chapman, Y. (2015). The Methodological
Dynamism of Grounded Theory. International Journal of
Qualitative Methods, 1-6.
Rieff, D. (2016a). Remembrance: An Ally of Justice, but No Friend
to Peace. [online] available at:
September 2016].
Rieff, D. (2016b). In praise of forgetting: historical memory and its
Ironies. New Haven, Yale University Press.
Sriram, C. L., Martin-Ortega, O., & Herman, J. (2010). War, conflict
and human rights: theory and practice. London: Routledge.
Tarling, N. (1992). The Cambridge history of Southeast Asia: Vol-
ume 2 : the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Cambridge
[England], Cambridge University Press.
Teitel, R. G. (2003). Transitional justice genealogy. Harvard Human
Rights Journal, 16, 69-94.
Thoms, Oskar N. T., Ron J., & Roland Paris. (2008). The Effects of
Transitional Justice Mechanisms. A Summary of Empirical
Research Findings and Implications for Analysts and Prac-
titioners. Working paper. Centre for International Policy
Studies: University of Ottawa.
United Nations Statistics Division, (2016). Population by age, sex and
Urban/rural residence. [online] available at:
September 2016].
Visoka, G. (2016). “Arrested Truth: Transitional Justice and the
Politics of Remembrance in Kosovo” Journal of Human
Rights Practice, 1-19.
Wisker, G. (2008). The postgraduate research handbook: succeed
with your MA, MPhil, EdD and PhD. New York: Palgrave
Macmillan.