Understanding the age of transitional justice : crimes, courts, commissions, and chronicling /
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Imprint: | New Brunswick, New Jersey : Rutgers University Press, 2018. |
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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 |
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.