"This is a pioneering study about former political prisoners in post-dictatorship Argentina. Anthropologist Rebekah Park sheds light on enduring struggles and human rights processes embodied in a remarkable group of activists fiercely committed to political change and accountability." - Susan Slyomovics (author of How to Accept German Reparations) "Chronicling the Association of Former Political Prisoners of CÓrdoba-an officially sanctioned group of Argentine political prisons-Park analyzes group members' contested place within the larger human rights community in Argentina. The book provides a valuable look at the continuing human rights struggles of those targeted during the dictatorship as well as the divisions and disagreements. By focusing on CÓrdoba, Park also offers an important example of how those outside Buenos Aires organize and attempt to deal with continuing issues related to their treatment during the dictatorship. Recommended." (Choice) "The Reappeared turns our beliefs of victimhood upside down. Who qualifies as a victim in transitional justice mechanisms? Park argues that victims are unequal and legal rights can only do so much to protect them ... This all makes The Reappeared a welcome wakeup call from our dream that human rights can protect all victims equally at all times and that transitional justice mechanisms can provide sufficient redress for survivors." (Allegra Lab: Anthropology, Law, Art & World) "[The Reappeared] makes a significant contribution to studies of human rights as it helps readers understand the gray areas of victimhood and demands that societies create spaces for complex victims as they deal with the aftermath of violence." (Anthropological Quarterly) "The way Park's nuanced ethnographic data builds and supports her conclusion is unique and very powerful." (PoLAR)