Building on legal anthropology and performance studies, this chapter analyses the Gacaca law talk and performances to evidence the wider context of changes in Rwanda post-1994 due to national and international pressures. The Rwandan government legally mandated Rwandans to actively participate in the gacaca courts from 2004 to 2012 for crimes committed during the 1994 Genocide against Tutsi. Every citizen was required to attend the local level courts to provide testimony and to serve as judge, witness and testifier on a weekly basis. In total, 15,300 courts ruled over nearly two million cases. Based on a ‘kaleidoscopic’ reading of optical illusions, or a slight shift in perspective to integrate the multiplicity of performances within the gac...
This thesis examines the practices of international, national, and localised criminal courts in post...
This paper argues that shifting the emphasis from the retributive nature of Gacaca to its restorativ...
After many decades of impunity, Rwanda has embarked upon a course of transitional justice committed ...
Building on legal anthropology and performance studies, this chapter analyses the Gacaca law talk an...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
Rwanda's genocide trials through the gacaca community courts, between 2002 and 2012, have attracted ...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
Since 2005, just over 12,000 community-based gacaca courts in Rwanda have heard more than 1.2 millio...
This article explores the various legal responses to the genocide in Rwanda through the lenses of tr...
This thesis examines the practices of international, national, and localised criminal courts in post...
Based on long-term fieldwork in urban and rural Rwanda between 1997 and 2002 as well as on recent fo...
The Rwandan way to post-genocide justice has attracted the attention of scholars and international p...
The Gacaca courts have been the subject of much academic work. Yet, few studies have examined the el...
The motivations, attitudes and behaviors of the quarter million lay judges who ran the mass prosecut...
After decades of cycling violence between Hutu and Tutsi groups in Rwanda and Burundi, violence peak...
This thesis examines the practices of international, national, and localised criminal courts in post...
This paper argues that shifting the emphasis from the retributive nature of Gacaca to its restorativ...
After many decades of impunity, Rwanda has embarked upon a course of transitional justice committed ...
Building on legal anthropology and performance studies, this chapter analyses the Gacaca law talk an...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
Rwanda's genocide trials through the gacaca community courts, between 2002 and 2012, have attracted ...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
Since 2005, just over 12,000 community-based gacaca courts in Rwanda have heard more than 1.2 millio...
This article explores the various legal responses to the genocide in Rwanda through the lenses of tr...
This thesis examines the practices of international, national, and localised criminal courts in post...
Based on long-term fieldwork in urban and rural Rwanda between 1997 and 2002 as well as on recent fo...
The Rwandan way to post-genocide justice has attracted the attention of scholars and international p...
The Gacaca courts have been the subject of much academic work. Yet, few studies have examined the el...
The motivations, attitudes and behaviors of the quarter million lay judges who ran the mass prosecut...
After decades of cycling violence between Hutu and Tutsi groups in Rwanda and Burundi, violence peak...
This thesis examines the practices of international, national, and localised criminal courts in post...
This paper argues that shifting the emphasis from the retributive nature of Gacaca to its restorativ...
After many decades of impunity, Rwanda has embarked upon a course of transitional justice committed ...