Understanding transitional justice : a struggle for peace, reconciliation, and reuilding.
By: Girelli, Giada.
Material type:
Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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CSHL Library | 340.115 GIR 2017 (Browse shelf) | Available |
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340.11 MAR 2018 CO.2/2 Legal Reasoning Legal Theory and Rights / | 340.114 BUC 2014 Transitional justice theories / | 340.115 DES 2023 Transitional Justice in Aparadigmatic Contexts | 340.115 GIR 2017 Understanding transitional justice : | 340.115 HAL 2023 Transitional Justice for FOXES | 340.115 RES 2018 Resistance and transitional justice / | 340.2 LEG Legal systems of Asia : |
Contents
1. Introduction Building Justice in the Wake of Atrocities
2. A Fight for Inclusion The Transforming Role of Victims in Transitional Justice Processes
3. Truth Chasing an Illusion
4. Reconciliation A Journey From Madness to Hope
5. Amnesties Juggling Tensions within the Transitional Justice Discourse
6. The Origins of International Criminal Accountability The Nuremberg and Tokyo Tribunals
7. International Criminal Justice Revisited The Ad Hoc Tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda
8. The Hybrid Experiment Assessing the Special Court for Sierra Leone
9. Healing a Wounded Nation The Reconciliatory Paradigm of Truth Commissions
10. Adapting the Perspective The Role of Bottom-Up Initiatives
11. No Hay Paz Sin Trabajo Incorporating Indigenous Perspectives in the Struggle for a More Meaningful Justice
12. Conclusions Justice Beyond Rhetoric
Bibliography
Index
The book is an accurate and accessible introduction to the complex and dynamic field of transitional and post-conflict justice, providing an overview of its recurring concepts and debated issues. Particular attention is reserved to how these concepts and issues have been addressed, both theoretically and literally, by lawyers, policy-makers, international bodies, and other actors informing the practice. By presenting significant, if undeniably disputable, alternatives to mainstream theories and past methods of addressing past injustice and (re)building a democratic state, the work aims to illustrate some foundational themes of transitional justice that have emerged from a diverse set of discussions. The author’s position thus arrives from a careful analysis of the advantages and disadvantages of answers to the question: how, after a traumatic social experience, is justice restored?
Giada Girelli holds a Law Degree obtained Summa cum Laude by the Università degli Studi di Torino. After a semester at the Center for Transnational Legal Studies, she attended an L.L.M in Human Rights, Conflict and Justice at SOAS (University of London). Here, she carried out clinicalresearch on childhood and access to justice, further developing a strong interest in the intersections among law, history and justice.
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