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The Center for Critical Democracy Studies

Demos21: Towards a Theory of Postcolonial Justice

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On Wednesday, November 10, 2021, Demos21, a year-long series of lectures, roundtables and workshops organized by ҵ’sCenterfor Critical Democracy Studies (CCDS), hosted its third event of the academic year. Guest speaker Professor JamilaMascatfrom UtrechtUniversityled a discussion on postcolonial justice. The hybrid event, which saw audience members attend both inperson inCCDS’sconference hallin the Quai d’Orsay Learning Commonsand online, formed part of the Contemporary European Democratic Theory section of Demos21, one of three themed sections that make up the convocation.

ProfessorMascatbegan by introducing the concept of postcolonial justice, arguing that postcolonial studies has more to offer than simply being a site for theoretical exercises in mourning. The idea ofpostcoloniality, as understood in this talk, draws on the words of Gayatri Spivak and Huguette Bello,andin particular Bello’s phrase “we are not the victims but the children of a crime against humanity,” which asserts the ongoing relationship between colonization and the postcolonial consciousness.Mascat’spaperaskswhat it meansto do postcolonialjustice andresponds by locatingpostcolonial justice as in conversation with transitional justice–in particular, reparations projects–as well asdistributive justice and global justice.

In delineating these various manifestations of justice,Mascatnotes that transitional justice often encapsulates the following: prosecution of the perpetrators; truth-seeking (via fact-finding); reparations (be theymaterial orsymbolic, individualorcollective); and reforms as guarantees of nonrecurrence. Postcolonial justice is distinct inseveralways, including the fact that the victims arebothremote and located in history. In general,Mascatcharacterizes postcolonial justice as less optimistic than transitional justice,in that it does not seek reconciliation, butinsteadtoreestablishthe social contract under fairer terms. Postcolonial justice is alsodistinct from distributive justice in that it performsthe important function of acknowledging historical harm. With regard to global justice,Mascatenvisions postcolonial justice as operating in tandem with other forms of justice, particularlyanticapitalistjustice, as understood broadly in the Marx quote “from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs.”

Mascatexpanded onthese ideasby raisingexamples of postcolonial reparations projects, with a particular focus on postcolonial populations in Europe, noting that the UN World Conference Against Racism held in Durban in 2001 was an important moment in the progression of postcolonial justice. She also briefly addressed detractors of reparations projects, noting thatthefeasibilityof such projectsin no way underminestheirmoral urgency. She went on to note the importance of prioritizing collective rather than individual reparations,so asnotto reproduce unjust consequences. She closed with a discussion of postcolonial justice as necessarily both critical and reparative.Following her talk,Mascattook questions from the audience;discussion topics included distinctions between historical crime and historical injustice and reparation in the context of contemporary democratic society.

You can watch a full recording of ProfessorMascat’stalk below.