Plural Justice: A Holistic Approach to Transitional Justice and Peacebuilding
Transitional justice processes often are too narrow and technocratic. Restorative and retributive justice alone may not lead to a stable peace, because it does not resolve underlying grievances that led to violent conflict. Therefore, transitional justice should incorporate conflict resolution, civil rights and participation, as well as socioeconomic and redistributive justice to address historical marginalization.
Left-to-Work for Less
Missouri voters gave the American labor movement a very welcome bit of good news earlier this month when by a 2-1 margin they refused to become the 28th state in the nation to adopt right-to-work legislation in the private sector. Coming on the heels of the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Janus v. AFSCME, which held that public servants such as teachers, social workers, police officers, and firefighters cannot be required to pay their fair share of union dues used to fund collective bargaining and contract administration, the Missouri victory demonstrated an unwillingness among voters to follow in the Court’s footsteps.
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