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Rethinking Transitional Justice for the Twenty-First Century
Beyond the End of History
Challenges conventional views of what it means to 'do justice' in the aftermath of mass atrocities, from a legal perspective.
Dustin N. Sharp (Author)
9781108425582, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 1 March 2018
204 pages
23.5 x 15.8 x 1.4 cm, 0.45 kg
Transitional justice is the dominant lens through which the world grapples with legacies of mass atrocity, and yet it has rarely reflected the diversity of peace and justice traditions around the world. Hewing to a largely western and legalist script, truth commissions and war crimes tribunals have become the default means of 'doing justice'. Rethinking Transitional Justice for the Twenty-First Century puts the blind spots and assumptions of transitional justice under the microscope, and asks whether the field might be re-imagined to better suit the diversity and realities of the twenty-first century. At the core of this re-imagining is an examination of the broader field of post-conflict peace building and associated critical theory, from which both caution and inspiration can be drawn. By using this lens, Dustin N. Sharp shows how we might begin to generate a more cosmopolitan and mosaic theory, and imagine more creative and context-sensitive approaches to building peace with justice.
1. Introduction: transitional justice foundations
Part I. Transitional Justice Peripheries: 2. Justice for what?
3. Justice for whom?
4. Justice to what ends?
Part II. Building a Better Foundation: 5. Peacebuilding and liberal post-conflict governance
6. Transitional justice and liberal international peacebuilding
7. Towards a more emancipatory transitional justice as peacebuilding project
8. Conclusion: after the end of history, what should transitional justice become?
Subject Areas: International human rights law [LBBR], Comparative law [LAM], Human rights [JPVH]