ABSTRACT

This book explores the practical and theoretical opportunities as well as the challenges raised by the expansion of transitional justice into new and ‘aparadigmatic’ cases.

The book defines transitional justice as the pursuit of accountability, recognition and/or disruption and applies an actor-centric analysis focusing on justice actors’ intentions of and responses to transitional justice. It offers a typology of different transitional justice contexts ranging from societies experiencing ongoing conflict to consolidated democracies, and includes chapters from all types of aparadigmatic contexts. This covers transitional justice in states with contested political authority, shared political authority, and consolidated political authority. The transitional justice initiatives explored by the wide range of contributors are those of Afghanistan, Belgium, France, Greenland/Denmark, Libya, Syria, Turkey/Kurdistan, UK/Iraq, US, and Yemen. Through these aparadigmatic case studies, the book develops a new framework that, appropriate to its expanding reach, allows us to understand the practice of transitional justice in a more context-sensitive, bottom-up, and actor-oriented way, which leaves room for the complexity and messiness of interventions on the ground.

The book will appeal to scholars and practitioners in the broad field of transitional justice, as represented in law, criminology, politics, conflict studies and human rights.

The Introduction, Chapter 8 and the Concluding Remarks of this book are freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

Transitional Justice in Aparadigmatic Contexts 1

chapter Chapter 1|14 pages

Diasporic and Domestic

Leveraging Criminal Accountability for Transitional Justice in the Middle East 1

chapter Chapter 4|18 pages

Transitional Justice in Afghanistan

A Hegemonic Power Discourse

chapter Chapter 5|20 pages

Unable to See the Forest for the Trees

Transitional Justice and the United States of America

chapter Chapter 6|20 pages

Transitional Justice in the North Atlantic

The Greenland Reconciliation Commission and the Role of Political Authority

chapter Chapter 8|19 pages

Divergent Ambitions

Bracketing the Disruptive Potential of Transitional Justice in Belgium 1

chapter Chapter 9|23 pages

Transitional Justice for European Terror Actors

Disrupting Europe's Security/Rights Terror Law Impasse

chapter Chapter 10|16 pages

Addressing the Legacies of the Past

Historical Commissions in Consolidated Democracies

chapter |14 pages

Concluding Remarks 1