This article explores the various legal responses to the genocide in Rwanda through the lenses of trauma, memory and performance, and addresses thequestion of whether trials as performance and methods of legal recourse including international courts, national prosecutions and traditionally adaptedmechanisms of transitional justice such as the gacaca courts are effective inreconciling trauma and establishing collective memory. This piece argues thatof the available methods of legal redress in post-genocide Rwanda, the gacaca courts are most effective in performing the function of reconciling trauma and establishing collective memory
This thesis examines the practices of international, national, and localised criminal courts in post...
In a post-conflict context, reconciliation takes place between the opposite forces, and when an ethn...
In recent decades, national governments and international authorities have increasingly emphasized t...
This article explores the various legal responses to the genocide in Rwanda through the lenses of tr...
Decades after the atrocious genocide, Rwanda is now a model of resilience and progress on the Africa...
This paper argues that shifting the emphasis from the retributive nature of Gacaca to its restorativ...
The Rwandan way to post-genocide justice has attracted the attention of scholars and international p...
This thesis considers the transitional justice process that followed the aftermath of the 1994 Rwand...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
Rwanda’s post-genocide experience with transitional justice1 is varied and complex. The Rwandan case...
Since 2005, just over 12,000 community-based gacaca courts in Rwanda have heard more than 1.2 millio...
This article responds to the normative question of whether post-conflict justice and reconciliation ...
The epicentre of post-genocide Rwandan society and politics has been the need for reconciliation to ...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
A major question for post-conflict governments to consider is how best to shape reconciliation effor...
This thesis examines the practices of international, national, and localised criminal courts in post...
In a post-conflict context, reconciliation takes place between the opposite forces, and when an ethn...
In recent decades, national governments and international authorities have increasingly emphasized t...
This article explores the various legal responses to the genocide in Rwanda through the lenses of tr...
Decades after the atrocious genocide, Rwanda is now a model of resilience and progress on the Africa...
This paper argues that shifting the emphasis from the retributive nature of Gacaca to its restorativ...
The Rwandan way to post-genocide justice has attracted the attention of scholars and international p...
This thesis considers the transitional justice process that followed the aftermath of the 1994 Rwand...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
Rwanda’s post-genocide experience with transitional justice1 is varied and complex. The Rwandan case...
Since 2005, just over 12,000 community-based gacaca courts in Rwanda have heard more than 1.2 millio...
This article responds to the normative question of whether post-conflict justice and reconciliation ...
The epicentre of post-genocide Rwandan society and politics has been the need for reconciliation to ...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
A major question for post-conflict governments to consider is how best to shape reconciliation effor...
This thesis examines the practices of international, national, and localised criminal courts in post...
In a post-conflict context, reconciliation takes place between the opposite forces, and when an ethn...
In recent decades, national governments and international authorities have increasingly emphasized t...