Understanding the age of transitional justice : crimes, courts, commissions, and chronicling /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:New Brunswick, New Jersey : Rutgers University Press, 2018.
Description:1 online resource (vi, 250 pages) : illustrations
Language:English
Series:Genocide, political violence, human rights
Genocide, political violence, human rights series.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12351595
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Adler, Nanci, editor.
ISBN:9780813597782
0813597781
9780813597775
0813597773
9780813597768
0813597765
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Print version record.
Summary:"Since the 1980s, an array of legal and non-legal practices--labeled Transitional Justice--has been developed to support post-repressive, post-authoritarian, and post-conflict societies in dealing with their traumatic past. In Understanding the Age of Transitional Justice, the contributors analyze the processes, products, and efficacy of a number of transitional justice mechanisms and look at how genocide, mass political violence, and historical injustices are being institutionally addressed. They invite readers to speculate on what (else) the transcripts produced by these institutions tell us about the past and the present, calling attention to the influence of implicit history conveyed in the narratives that have gained an audience through international criminal tribunals, trials, and truth commissions. Nanci Adler has gathered leading specialists to scrutinize the responses to and effects of violent pasts that provide new perspectives for understanding and applying transitional justice mechanisms in an effort to stop the recycling of old repressions into new ones"--
Other form:Print version: Understanding the age of transitional justice. New Brunswick, New Jersey : Rutgers University Press, 2018 9780813597775
Table of Contents:
  • Intro; Title Page; Copyright; Contents; Introduction: On History, Historians, and Transitional Justice; Part I: The Complex Relationship between Truth and Justice; 1. Swinging the Pendulum: Fin-de-Siècle Historians in the Courts; 2. Time, Justice, and Human Rights: Statutory Limitation on the Right to Truth?; 3. How Truth Recovery Can Benefit from a Conditional Amnesty; 4. New Epistemologies for Confronting International Crimes: Developing the Information, Dialogue, and Process (IDP) Approach to Transitional Justice; Part II: The Narrative of the Trial Record.
  • 5. The Spark for Genocide? Propaganda and Historical Narratives at International Criminal Tribunals6. The International Criminal Trial Record as Historical Source; Part III: The Afterlife of Transitional Justice Processes; 7. Narrating (In)Justice in the Form of a Reparation Claim: Bottom-Up Reflections on a Postcolonial Setting-The Rawagede Case; 8. Collective and Competitive Victimhood as Identity in the Former Yugoslavia; 9. Perpetrator-Victims: How Universal Victimhood in Cambodia Impacts Transitional Justice Measures.
  • 10. Collective Crimes, Collective Memory, and Transitional Justice in BangladeshAcknowledgments; Notes on Contributors; Index.