2020
DOI: 10.1163/23528230-8502a006
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Overcoming Reconciliation as a Wicked Problem

Abstract: This contribution provides clues as to why (the quest for) reconciliation in South Africa fits the broad definition of a wicked problem. Popularized by Horst Rittel and Melvin Webber (1973), wicked problem refers to something that is either too difficult or nearly impossible to resolve. It is abundantly clear from the available literature that reconciliation is understood in very different ways. Not only is there a lack of conceptual clarity, but strategies aimed at working towards this ideal reveal or produce… Show more

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“…Solomons, 2020b) and "a wicked problem" (cf. Solomons, 2020a), by which he means "something that is either too difficult or nearly impossible to resolve" (2020a:198). 2 Conceptual clarity in theologies of reconciliation are notoriously difficult to achieve, since it means not only working with one concept -namely, reconciliation -but instead with a set of interrelated concepts.…”
Section: Speaking Of Reconciliationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Solomons, 2020b) and "a wicked problem" (cf. Solomons, 2020a), by which he means "something that is either too difficult or nearly impossible to resolve" (2020a:198). 2 Conceptual clarity in theologies of reconciliation are notoriously difficult to achieve, since it means not only working with one concept -namely, reconciliation -but instead with a set of interrelated concepts.…”
Section: Speaking Of Reconciliationmentioning
confidence: 99%