
New Books Network Piergiorgio Di Giminiani et al. eds., "The Futures of Reparations in Latin America: Imagination, Translation, and Belonging" (Rutgers UP, 2026)
Mar 20, 2026
Karine Vanthuyne, anthropologist studying Indigenous memory and reparations. Piergiorgio Di Giminiani, scholar of land claims and indigeneity in Chile. Helene Risør, researcher on violence, democracy, and reparative practices. They explore reparations across Latin America. Conversations cover translation of harm into policy, land and environmental repair, public memory, and how reparations reshape belonging and political futures.
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Anticipate Pragmatic Survivor Choices
- Expect policy measures to be incommensurate with harm and observe pragmatic choices by survivors rather than romantic rejections.
- Karine Vanthuyne highlights ethnography showing people accept money for urgent needs and redirect funds for collective goals.
Recognition Reassigns Moral Duties To Survivors
- Reparations reconfigure political belonging by placing victims at the center and imposing moral responsibilities of storytelling and coexistence.
- Piergiorgio Di Giminiani notes recognition brings demands on survivors and can make them stewards of memory across generations.
Archives Gave Flesh To The Disappeared
- Chilean human rights archive-making during dictatorship acted as repair for parents seeking disappeared relatives.
- Karine Vanthuyne describes archives giving 'flesh' to disappeared people and creating new victim communities and belonging.

