After many decades of impunity, Rwanda has embarked upon a course of transitional justice committed to prosecuting all who are suspected of involvement in the 1994 genocide. The first phase, which began in 1997 and is still continuing, targets the most serious offenders. Some 10,000 have been tried under the system. Confronted with its limitations, Rwanda has devised a second approach, known as gacaca, which focuses on a lower and less heinous level of participation in genocide, and which is inspired by traditional models of local justice. Acting upon legislation adopted in 2001, a pilot phase convinced Rwandan justice officials of the viability of the process throughout the country. The institutions have been fine-tuned, and become fully o...
Despite the fact that the Gacaca Courts have been the focus of a range of academic research, this wo...
The Rwandan genocide triggered a vast number of criminal and quasi-criminal prosecutions. Rwanda the...
In 2000 an ambitious new process of transitional justice was launched in Rwanda as a way to adjudica...
After many decades of impunity, Rwanda has embarked upon a course of transitional justice committed ...
Since 2005, just over 12,000 community-based gacaca courts in Rwanda have heard more than 1.2 millio...
Since its rise to power in July of 1994, the Rwandan government has been committed to prosecuting al...
[Extract] During the 1994 Rwandan genocide approximately 800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutus were kille...
This paper argues that shifting the emphasis from the retributive nature of Gacaca to its restorativ...
More than a decade after the Rwandan genocide, the sheer magnitude of what took place still has the ...
This thesis considers the transitional justice process that followed the aftermath of the 1994 Rwand...
Today, 14 years have gone since the whole world turned their backs on Rwanda, the small country in E...
Rwanda's judicial system, however, is not capable of responding to the challenge. Given the number o...
Rwanda’s post-genocide experience with transitional justice1 is varied and complex. The Rwandan case...
The aftermath of the Tutsi genocide in Rwanda in the spring of 1994, which left one million victims,...
Decades after the atrocious genocide, Rwanda is now a model of resilience and progress on the Africa...
Despite the fact that the Gacaca Courts have been the focus of a range of academic research, this wo...
The Rwandan genocide triggered a vast number of criminal and quasi-criminal prosecutions. Rwanda the...
In 2000 an ambitious new process of transitional justice was launched in Rwanda as a way to adjudica...
After many decades of impunity, Rwanda has embarked upon a course of transitional justice committed ...
Since 2005, just over 12,000 community-based gacaca courts in Rwanda have heard more than 1.2 millio...
Since its rise to power in July of 1994, the Rwandan government has been committed to prosecuting al...
[Extract] During the 1994 Rwandan genocide approximately 800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutus were kille...
This paper argues that shifting the emphasis from the retributive nature of Gacaca to its restorativ...
More than a decade after the Rwandan genocide, the sheer magnitude of what took place still has the ...
This thesis considers the transitional justice process that followed the aftermath of the 1994 Rwand...
Today, 14 years have gone since the whole world turned their backs on Rwanda, the small country in E...
Rwanda's judicial system, however, is not capable of responding to the challenge. Given the number o...
Rwanda’s post-genocide experience with transitional justice1 is varied and complex. The Rwandan case...
The aftermath of the Tutsi genocide in Rwanda in the spring of 1994, which left one million victims,...
Decades after the atrocious genocide, Rwanda is now a model of resilience and progress on the Africa...
Despite the fact that the Gacaca Courts have been the focus of a range of academic research, this wo...
The Rwandan genocide triggered a vast number of criminal and quasi-criminal prosecutions. Rwanda the...
In 2000 an ambitious new process of transitional justice was launched in Rwanda as a way to adjudica...