Almost 25 years after the extreme cruelly and violence that occurred in Rwanda during the genocide of 1994, the perpetrators and victims live together as neighbors. Psychology is of extraordinary value in explaining both the horror and its overcoming. We cannot explain the processes of interpersonal or national reconciliation without first understanding the dynamics of the conflict in general, and of the Rwandan conflict in particular. Before, during and after any violent conflict, emotional, cognitive and behavioral processes take place, affecting those involved and making them capable of the best and the worst. This is the objective of this article: to understand the psychological processes that lead to violent conflict and to analyze the conditions for reconstruction, and personal and social reconciliation, focused on the case of Rwanda, one of the most fitting scenarios for studying violence and the overcoming of it.
机构:
Columbia Univ, Inst Study Human Rights, New York, NY 10027 USA
NYU, Ctr Global Affairs, Human Rights & Transit Justice, New York, NY USAColumbia Univ, Inst Study Human Rights, New York, NY 10027 USA
机构:
Univ Virginia, Ctr Study Mind & Human Interact, Charlottesville, VA 22903 USAUniv Virginia, Ctr Study Mind & Human Interact, Charlottesville, VA 22903 USA