ABSTRACT

This book explores the challenges of transitional justice in West Africa, specifically how countries in the region have dealt with transitional justice problems in the last 30 years (1990–2020), and how they have managed the process.

Using comparative, historical, and legal analyses it examines the politics of justice after violent conflicts in West Africa, the major transitional justice mechanisms established in the region, and how countries have used these institutions to address injustice and the pains of war in some West African countries. The book examines how transitional justice mechanisms have contributed to victims’ rights, reconciliation, and peace in transitional societies, and whether transitional justice mechanisms deployed in West Africa were suitable or ill-fitted, and the politics of deploying them. The book is addressed to a wide audience: policymakers, and graduate and post-graduate students of transitional justice, conflict resolution, peace studies, conflict transformation, international criminal law, law and similar subjects.

This book will be of great value to academics and researchers, as well as lecturers in tertiary institutions offering relevant courses; legal practitioners; peace practitioners/NGOs; and those working in the field of transitional justice and human rights.

chapter Chapter 1|21 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 4|19 pages

The Rise and Fall of Charles Taylor

Lessons and Impacts on Peace in Liberia

chapter Chapter 6|15 pages

Triumph of the Victims

Trial of Hissène Habré at the Extraordinary African Chambers within the Courts of Senegal

chapter Chapter 7|25 pages

Distant Justice

The International Criminal Court in West Africa

chapter Chapter 8|19 pages

Amnesties and Transitional Justice in West Africa

chapter Chapter 9|21 pages

Justice on an Empty Stomach

Transitional Justice and Victims' Rights in West Africa

chapter Chapter 10|21 pages

Reconciliation as an Event

Transitional Justice and Reconciliation in West Africa

chapter Chapter 11|20 pages

Transitional Justice and Peace in West Africa

chapter Chapter 12|14 pages

Conclusion

Big Ideas, Shallow Justice