<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>"Martha Minow is a voice of moral clarity: a lawyer arguing for forgiveness, a scholar arguing for evidence, a person arguing for compassion." --Jill Lepore, author of <em>These Truths</em><p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>In an age increasingly defined by accusation and resentment, Martha Minow makes an eloquent, deeply-researched argument in favor of strengthening the role of forgiveness in the administration of law. Through three case studies, Minow addresses such foundational issues as: Who has the right to forgive? Who should be forgiven? And under what terms?</p><p>The result is as lucid as it is compassionate: A compelling study of the mechanisms of justice by one of this country's foremost legal experts.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>In a book at once compassionate, nuanced, and tough-minded, Martha Minow brings together in an illuminating conjunction a set of issues that at first glance seem to have nothing whatever in common: horrific crimes committed by child soldiers, corporate and student debt, and presidential pardons for unrepentant criminals. All of these, as Minow brilliantly shows, raise the same pressing and contentious question: For what offenses and under what conditions should a just legal system offer forgiveness? This is a legal minefield through which <em>When Should Law Forgive?</em> provides an indispensable guide.--Stephen Greenblatt, Pulitzer Prize winner<br><br>Minow's compassionate, knowledgeable, and nuanced examination of the gains that may follow policies that substitute forgiveness for rigid legal remedies is groundbreaking.-- "Publishers Weekly"<br><br>Minow's new book thoroughly explores one enduring means of conflict resolution that is far too often overlooked: forgiveness.--Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson "Law360"<br><br>In this time, so shaped by reactionary and 'call-out' cultures that foster harsh, virtue-signaling condemnation of others, this brilliant book carries a profound reminder: for a diverse society to cohere as a humane society, it has to have the capacity--rooted in law--to forgive and reconcile. This book's inspiring discussion of how the law can do this is a beacon to that more humane society.--Claude Steele, author of Whistling Vivaldi<br><br>Martha Minow's work on how societies can recover from large-scale tragedies and human-rights violations has been transformational.... Her insights are smart, thoughtful, and rooted in a deep, nuanced understanding of what justice sometimes demands.--Bryan Stevenson, founder of the Equal Justice Initiative<br><br>No one but Martha Minow could have written this brilliant, and brilliantly readable, meditation on the role of forgiveness in the law and of the law in forgiveness... [showing how] to move forward and rebuild while both remembering the past and getting past it.--Laurence Tribe, author of To End a Presidency<br>
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