"Winner of the Herbert Jacob Book Prize, Law and Society Association"
"Honorable Mention for the Clifford Geertz Book Award, Society for the Anthropology of Religion"
"Honorable Mention for the Association for Political and Legal Anthropology Book Prize in Critical Anthropology"
"An impressive achievement which combines ethnography, law and philosophy to propose a sensitive and informed account of a phenomenon reflecting the complexities of the Iranian society while at the same time accompanying its transformations. It is also an important contribution to the law-and-society theory."<b>---Baudouin Dupret, <i>Arab Law Quarterly</i></b>
A remarkable look at an understudied feature of the Iranian justice system, where forgiveness is as much a right of victims as retribution
Iran’s criminal courts are notorious for meting out severe sentences—according to Amnesty International, the country has the world’s highest rate of capital punishment per capita. Less known to outside observers, however, is the Iranian criminal code’s recognition of forgiveness, where victims of violent crimes, or the families of murder victims, can request the state to forgo punishing the criminal. Forgiveness Work shows that in the Iranian justice system, forbearance is as much a right of victims as retribution. Drawing on extended interviews and first-hand observations of more than eighty murder trials, Arzoo Osanloo explores why some families of victims forgive perpetrators and how a wide array of individuals contribute to the fraught business of negotiating reconciliation.
Based on Qur’anic principles, Iran’s criminal codes encourage mercy and compel judicial officials to help parties reach a settlement. As no formal regulations exist to guide those involved, an informal cottage industry has grown around forgiveness advocacy. Interested parties—including attorneys, judges, social workers, the families of victims and perpetrators, and even performing artists—intervene in cases, drawing from such sources as scripture, ritual, and art to stir feelings of forgiveness. These actors forge new and sometimes conflicting strategies to secure forbearance, and some aim to reform social attitudes and laws on capital punishment.
Forgiveness Work examines how an Islamic victim-centered approach to justice sheds light on the conditions of mercy.
"Through a rich ethnography of the roles of mercy and retribution in the practice of law, this fascinating book shows how forgiveness emerged in the Iranian legal system, and how this developed from the moral codes of forbearance within Islam and Iranian culture. Forgiveness Work is essential reading for those who wish to better understand Iranian society, and the intersections of law, culture, and religion."—Sally Engle Merry, New York University
"Forgiveness Work provides a deep appreciation for notions of justice that Anglophones rarely get to hear about when thinking of Iran. It shows readers the moral basis of the judicial system, located not only in scripture and legal codes, but also in the deeply humanistic ethos of the criminal courts centered around forgiveness and mercy."—Michael M. J. Fischer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology