Publication | Closed Access
Does Truth Lead to Reconciliation? Testing the Causal Assumptions of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Process
279
Citations
17
References
2004
Year
NegotiationCritical Race TheorySouth AfricansSouth African HistoryAfrican DiasporaDoes Truth LeadSocial SciencesRaceContemporary RacismAfrican HistorySouth-south CooperationSouth AfricaDiscourse AnalysisPost-truthAfrican Social ChangeAfrican ConflictCausal AssumptionsAfrican PoliticsAfrican StudiesAnti-racismSouth African TruthAfrican HumanitiesSociologyEpistemic JusticeAfrocentricityTruth CommissionsSocial Justice
Throughout the world, truth commissions have been created under the assumption that getting people to understand the past will somehow contribute to reconciliation between those who were enemies under the ancien regime. In South Africa, the truth and reconciliation process is explicitly based on the hypothesis that knowledge of the past will lead to acceptance, tolerance, and reconciliation in the future. My purpose here is to test that hypothesis, based on data collected in a 2001 survey of over 3,700 South Africans. My most important finding is that those who accept the “truth” about the country's apartheid past are more likely to hold reconciled racial attitudes. Racial reconciliation also depends to a considerable degree on interracial contact, evidence that adds weight to the “contact hypothesis” investigated by western social scientists. Ultimately, these findings are hopeful for South Africa's democratic transition, since racial attitudes seem not to be intransigent.
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