This study explains how the four features of transitional justice, namely: criminal justice, truth telling, reparations and institutional reform apply to nations transitioning from oppression or civil war to democratic states. The two nations discussed are South Africa and Sierra Leone, both in the vanguard of transforming judicial procedures of transitional justice. It can be concluded that context is particularly important in transitional justice issues and that the case studies expand on the definition and understanding of transitional justice
Sierra Leone’s civil conflict caused 70,000 casualties and left 2.6 million people displaced. The wa...
This chapter first analyses three facets of transitional justice – the criminal-retributive, the hi...
Abstract This article presents findings from a qualitative case study of the Truth and Reconciliatio...
Demonstrating groundbreaking analysis, this is the first major study to evaluate the transitional ju...
The Sub-Saharan African countries of South Africa, Sierra Leone and Rwanda have recently gone throug...
When states emerge from violent conflicts or authoritarian oppression, there is a need to address vi...
Transitional justice is a fast-growing concept, both in practice and in its scholarship. Even though...
The prevalence of violent conflicts over the last few decades has left numerous countries in the nee...
This Article re-conceptualizes the idea of transitional justice mechanisms as varying approaches mea...
Since the end of the Cold War, political new beginnings have increasingly been linked to questions o...
Community-based restorative transitional justice is an important feature of peace consolidation, max...
Transition and Justice examines a series of cases from across the African continent where peaceful ‘...
This article argues that transitional justice ranges from the very personal and local to the global ...
The objective of this research is to determine which institutional legal system, or combination of l...
The Sub-Saharan African countries of South Africa, Sierra Leone and Rwanda have recently gone throug...
Sierra Leone’s civil conflict caused 70,000 casualties and left 2.6 million people displaced. The wa...
This chapter first analyses three facets of transitional justice – the criminal-retributive, the hi...
Abstract This article presents findings from a qualitative case study of the Truth and Reconciliatio...
Demonstrating groundbreaking analysis, this is the first major study to evaluate the transitional ju...
The Sub-Saharan African countries of South Africa, Sierra Leone and Rwanda have recently gone throug...
When states emerge from violent conflicts or authoritarian oppression, there is a need to address vi...
Transitional justice is a fast-growing concept, both in practice and in its scholarship. Even though...
The prevalence of violent conflicts over the last few decades has left numerous countries in the nee...
This Article re-conceptualizes the idea of transitional justice mechanisms as varying approaches mea...
Since the end of the Cold War, political new beginnings have increasingly been linked to questions o...
Community-based restorative transitional justice is an important feature of peace consolidation, max...
Transition and Justice examines a series of cases from across the African continent where peaceful ‘...
This article argues that transitional justice ranges from the very personal and local to the global ...
The objective of this research is to determine which institutional legal system, or combination of l...
The Sub-Saharan African countries of South Africa, Sierra Leone and Rwanda have recently gone throug...
Sierra Leone’s civil conflict caused 70,000 casualties and left 2.6 million people displaced. The wa...
This chapter first analyses three facets of transitional justice – the criminal-retributive, the hi...
Abstract This article presents findings from a qualitative case study of the Truth and Reconciliatio...