There were two, not one, amnesty laws passed in relation to the 6 October 1976 massacre at Thammasat University and coup in Thailand. The first amnesty law, passed on 24 December 1976, legalized the coup and prevented those who created the conditions for the coup and seized power on the evening of 6 October from being held to account. The second amnesty law, passed on 16 September 1978, freed eighteen student activists still undergoing criminal prosecution and dismissed the charges against them. Although neither amnesty mentioned the massacre, the urgency of producing and then safeguarding impunity for the state and para-state actors behind the violence at Thammasat was the absent presence in both laws. Combining a close reading of both law...
This Article will focus on the issue of accountability under the existing international law and will...
This piece (authored by Jaya Ramji-Nogales) examines an area long neglected in current discussions o...
How do victims of violence perceive blanket amnesties as part of transitional justice mechanisms in ...
The topic of amnesty is a vital one in transitional justice scholarship. As a political tool it has ...
This article uses the two amnesties granted by the Cambodian government in 1994 and 1996 to explore ...
The authors argue in this article that some categories of amnesty programmes, such as ‘blanket’ and...
Transitional countries have struggled to overcome impunity for human rights violations committed by ...
In the year 2000, Uganda passed the Amnesty Act – a blanket amnesty law that effectively ended a 20-...
Until recently, immunity measures like amnesties were considered an acceptable part of promoting tra...
Article based on a lecture made at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies on January 28, 2008 consi...
<p>In the context past gross human rights violation cases in Indonesia, the President’s constitution...
In many countries that have experienced coups d’état, the coup executors, particularly senior rankin...
Traditionally, amnesty was seen as the substance of peace and there was a presumption of the legitim...
The article analyses a unique phenomenon in the Slovak society - amnesty that has been abolished nea...
The article focuses on the question of the suitability of amnesty in tackling national heritage of ...
This Article will focus on the issue of accountability under the existing international law and will...
This piece (authored by Jaya Ramji-Nogales) examines an area long neglected in current discussions o...
How do victims of violence perceive blanket amnesties as part of transitional justice mechanisms in ...
The topic of amnesty is a vital one in transitional justice scholarship. As a political tool it has ...
This article uses the two amnesties granted by the Cambodian government in 1994 and 1996 to explore ...
The authors argue in this article that some categories of amnesty programmes, such as ‘blanket’ and...
Transitional countries have struggled to overcome impunity for human rights violations committed by ...
In the year 2000, Uganda passed the Amnesty Act – a blanket amnesty law that effectively ended a 20-...
Until recently, immunity measures like amnesties were considered an acceptable part of promoting tra...
Article based on a lecture made at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies on January 28, 2008 consi...
<p>In the context past gross human rights violation cases in Indonesia, the President’s constitution...
In many countries that have experienced coups d’état, the coup executors, particularly senior rankin...
Traditionally, amnesty was seen as the substance of peace and there was a presumption of the legitim...
The article analyses a unique phenomenon in the Slovak society - amnesty that has been abolished nea...
The article focuses on the question of the suitability of amnesty in tackling national heritage of ...
This Article will focus on the issue of accountability under the existing international law and will...
This piece (authored by Jaya Ramji-Nogales) examines an area long neglected in current discussions o...
How do victims of violence perceive blanket amnesties as part of transitional justice mechanisms in ...