Jill Stauffer

Professor Jill Stauffer runs a Restorative Practices program at Haverford College, is co-director of the Kim Institute for Ethical Inquiry and Leadership, and directs the program in Peace, Justice, and Human Rights. She is not a member of the college’s administration and is not speaking on behalf of the college. She is author of the book Ethical Loneliness: The Injustice of Not Being Heard, which was used as a model for the series of dialogues amongst Indigenous nations that lead to the Uluru Statement from the Heart, a cooperative request to the Australian government for indigenous voice in Parliament. She has published articles on legal and ethical responsibility, transitional justice and political reconciliation, settler colonialism, indigenous land claims and indigenous refusal/resistance, and how international law judges child soldiers, as well as a series of interviews with philosophers in The Believer. She has a forthcoming book called Temporal Privilege, about the role of competing temporalities in spaces of political conflict or resistance and in everyday human life.


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Writing on Public Books

Toward a University of Repair

What was so unique about Haverford College that it was worth mocking in a Congressional hearing?