This chapter first analyses three facets of transitional justice -- the criminal-retributive, the historical-reconciliative, and the social-redistributive -- and identifies some of the synergies and tensions among them. The second section shines a spotlight on the post-independence, conflict, and post-conflict histories of Uganda, Sierra Leone, and Burundi, generally characterizing their distinct approaches to transitional justice, and the differing degrees of attention they devote to the various strands of justice. For each of the three countries, the text points to the work of a community-based civil society organization, and spotlights its approach to post-conflict transition in that country. The final section of the paper takes a sober ...
Transitional justice (TJ) in Zimbabwe can be gleaned as a maze of detached filaments mainly champion...
This paper explains conceptual lapses in the discourses of transition and reform in post-war societ...
Sierra Leone, Rwanda and Uganda are only three out of so many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa that s...
This chapter first analyses three facets of transitional justice – the criminal-retributive, the hi...
Since the end of the Cold War, political new beginnings have increasingly been linked to questions o...
Published in Rethinking Transitions: Equality and Social Justice in Societies Emerging from Conflict...
Transition and Justice examines a series of cases from across the African continent where peaceful ‘...
The prevalence of violent conflicts over the last few decades has left numerous countries in the nee...
This thesis analyzes the development of national justice processes in Uganda in the wake of war in o...
This article uses the cases of Burundi, Mozambique and Sierra Leone to analyse transitional justice ...
What is Transitional Justice? Following large-scale civil conflicts, societies often create transiti...
Transitional justice is a fast-growing concept, both in practice and in its scholarship. Even though...
Through a comparative study of different African conflicts, this research aims at underlying the nee...
Transitional justice (e.g. trials, truth commissions, reparations, amnesties, etc.) has been vocifer...
Over the past two decades, more than 15 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa have put an end to armed con...
Transitional justice (TJ) in Zimbabwe can be gleaned as a maze of detached filaments mainly champion...
This paper explains conceptual lapses in the discourses of transition and reform in post-war societ...
Sierra Leone, Rwanda and Uganda are only three out of so many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa that s...
This chapter first analyses three facets of transitional justice – the criminal-retributive, the hi...
Since the end of the Cold War, political new beginnings have increasingly been linked to questions o...
Published in Rethinking Transitions: Equality and Social Justice in Societies Emerging from Conflict...
Transition and Justice examines a series of cases from across the African continent where peaceful ‘...
The prevalence of violent conflicts over the last few decades has left numerous countries in the nee...
This thesis analyzes the development of national justice processes in Uganda in the wake of war in o...
This article uses the cases of Burundi, Mozambique and Sierra Leone to analyse transitional justice ...
What is Transitional Justice? Following large-scale civil conflicts, societies often create transiti...
Transitional justice is a fast-growing concept, both in practice and in its scholarship. Even though...
Through a comparative study of different African conflicts, this research aims at underlying the nee...
Transitional justice (e.g. trials, truth commissions, reparations, amnesties, etc.) has been vocifer...
Over the past two decades, more than 15 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa have put an end to armed con...
Transitional justice (TJ) in Zimbabwe can be gleaned as a maze of detached filaments mainly champion...
This paper explains conceptual lapses in the discourses of transition and reform in post-war societ...
Sierra Leone, Rwanda and Uganda are only three out of so many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa that s...