ABSTRACT

Restorative justice is increasingly being applied to settings characterized by large-scale violence and human rights abuses. While many embrace this development as an important step in attempts to transform protracted conflict, there are a number of conceptual challenges in transporting restorative justice from a democratic setting to one which has been affected by mass victimisation or civil war. These include responding to the seriousness and scale of harms that have been caused, the blurred boundaries between victims and offenders, and the difficulties associated with holding someone to account and compelling reparative activities. Despite reams of paper being devoted to defining restorative justice within democratic settings (where the concept first emerged), restorative scholars have been slow to comment on the integration of restorative justice into the transitional justice discourse.

Restorative Justice in Transitional Settings brings together a number of leading scholars from around the world to respond to this gap by developing and further articulating restorative justice for transitional settings. These scholars push the boundaries of restorative justice to seek more effective approaches to addressing the causes and consequences of conflict and oppression in these diverse contexts. Each chapter highlights a limitation with current conceptions of restorative justice in the transitional justice literature and then suggests a way in which the limitation might be overcome.

This book has strong interdisciplinary value and will be of interest to criminologists, legal scholars, and those engaged with international relations and peace treaties.

chapter 2|21 pages

Clearing the conceptual haze

Restorative justice concepts in transitional settings

chapter 4|18 pages

Restorative justice and reconciliation

The missing link in transitional justice

chapter 5|21 pages

Stalking the state

The state as a stakeholder in post-conflict restorative justice

chapter 6|20 pages

Participation as restoration

The current limits of restorative justice for victim participants in international criminal trials

chapter 7|18 pages

Working across frontiers in Northern Ireland

The contribution of community-based restorative justice to security and justice in local communities

chapter 8|19 pages

Restorative justice in transitions

The problem of ‘the community' and collective responsibility

chapter 11|21 pages

When does transitional justice begin and end?

Colonised peoples, liberal democracies and restorative justice