Rwanda's genocide trials through the gacaca community courts, between 2002 and 2012, have attracted substantial critique and also become a key vehicle for analysing wider political and social dynamics, including policy-making under the Rwandan Patriotic Front. A common criticism of gacaca is that it allowed the Rwandan state to deploy the language of devolved, popularly owned justice while further centralizing and consolidating state power. Based on fieldwork conducted over ten years, including more than 650 interviews and observations of 105 gacaca hearings, the article responds to this criticism and argues that while we should be sceptical of the Rwandan government's overly romantic depiction of gacaca as organic, decentralized justice an...
This article investigates the violent aftermaths of Rwanda's 1994 Genocide and Liberation war by ana...
Rwanda’s post-genocide experience with transitional justice1 is varied and complex. The Rwandan case...
peer reviewedIn post-genocide Rwanda, in addition to gacaca courts, a truth commission is needed in ...
Based on long-term fieldwork in urban and rural Rwanda between 1997 and 2002 as well as on recent fo...
Since 2005, just over 12,000 community-based gacaca courts in Rwanda have heard more than 1.2 millio...
In 2000 an ambitious new process of transitional justice was launched in Rwanda as a way to adjudica...
Building on legal anthropology and performance studies, this chapter analyses the Gacaca law talk an...
Building on legal anthropology and performance studies, this chapter analyses the Gacaca law talk an...
After decades of cycling violence between Hutu and Tutsi groups in Rwanda and Burundi, violence peak...
The motivations, attitudes and behaviors of the quarter million lay judges who ran the mass prosecut...
The epicentre of post-genocide Rwandan society and politics has been the need for reconciliation to ...
Twenty years after the 1994 genocide, Rwanda shows all indications of moving quickly towards socio-e...
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 ...
Rwanda took the new, global norm of accountability to its logical extreme by putting more than one m...
This article investigates the violent aftermaths of Rwanda's 1994 Genocide and Liberation war by ana...
Rwanda’s post-genocide experience with transitional justice1 is varied and complex. The Rwandan case...
peer reviewedIn post-genocide Rwanda, in addition to gacaca courts, a truth commission is needed in ...
Based on long-term fieldwork in urban and rural Rwanda between 1997 and 2002 as well as on recent fo...
Since 2005, just over 12,000 community-based gacaca courts in Rwanda have heard more than 1.2 millio...
In 2000 an ambitious new process of transitional justice was launched in Rwanda as a way to adjudica...
Building on legal anthropology and performance studies, this chapter analyses the Gacaca law talk an...
Building on legal anthropology and performance studies, this chapter analyses the Gacaca law talk an...
After decades of cycling violence between Hutu and Tutsi groups in Rwanda and Burundi, violence peak...
The motivations, attitudes and behaviors of the quarter million lay judges who ran the mass prosecut...
The epicentre of post-genocide Rwandan society and politics has been the need for reconciliation to ...
Twenty years after the 1994 genocide, Rwanda shows all indications of moving quickly towards socio-e...
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 ...
Rwanda took the new, global norm of accountability to its logical extreme by putting more than one m...
This article investigates the violent aftermaths of Rwanda's 1994 Genocide and Liberation war by ana...
Rwanda’s post-genocide experience with transitional justice1 is varied and complex. The Rwandan case...
peer reviewedIn post-genocide Rwanda, in addition to gacaca courts, a truth commission is needed in ...