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Abstract
This article offers a vision of a community that includes non-human beings. After suffering environmental damage, a community is often harmed and confused. Restorative justice may have the potential to intervene in divisions with a community approach. However, though environmental damage affects both human and non-human beings, restorative justice typically concerns itself with human communities. Therefore, through a review of the literature I consider what non-human beings mean for a community, focusing on the Moyainaoshi Movement (MM) in Minamata, Japan, in the 1990s. This movement aimed to reconstruct the community after severe, long-term pollution. First, I examine the motivations of several stakeholders that worked to reconstruct the Minamata community in the 1990s. Second, I clarify the role of non-human beings in the vision of community as practiced by the MM. I find that non-human beings served as symbols to connect human beings within the community. Finally, I conclude that a vision of a community that includes non-human beings can propel community reconstruction in our current political realities, and I reveal that in studying this concept of community in restorative justice, listening to victims’ voices is of paramount importance.
The International Journal of Restorative Justice |
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Article | Imagining a community that includes non-human beingsThe 1990s Moyainaoshi Movement in Minamata, Japan |
Keywords | restorative justice, community, environmental damage, spirituality, Japan, the Moyainaoshi Movement |
Authors | Orika Komatsubara |
DOI | 10.5553/TIJRJ.000061 |
Author's information |
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