ABSTRACT

The demand for recognition, responsibility, and reparations is regularly invoked in the wake of colonialism, genocide, and mass violence: there can be no victims without recognition, no perpetrators without responsibility, and no justice without reparations. Or so it seems from law’s limited repertoire for assembling the archive after ‘the disaster’. Archival and memorial practices are central to contexts where transitional justice, addressing historical wrongs, or reparations are at stake. The archive serves as a repository or ‘storehouse’ of what needs to be gathered and recognised so that it can be left behind in order to inaugurate the future. The archive manifests law’s authority and its troubled conscience. It is an indispensable part of the liberal legal response to biopolitical violence.

This collection challenges established approaches to transitional justice by opening up new dialogues about the problem of assembling law’s archive. The volume presents research drawn from multiple jurisdictions that address the following questions. What resists being archived? What spaces and practices of memory - conscious and unconscious - undo legal and sovereign alibis and confessions? And what narrative forms expose the limits of responsibility, recognition, and reparations? By treating the law as an ‘archive’, this book traces the failure of universalised categories such as 'perpetrator', 'victim', 'responsibility', and 'innocence,' posited by the liberal legal state. It thereby uncovers law’s counter-archive as a challenge to established forms of representing and responding to violence.

chapter 1|15 pages

Introduction

A counter-archival sense

chapter 1|18 pages

A counter-archival sensibility

Picking up Hannah Arendt's ‘Reflections on Little Rock’

chapter 2|16 pages

Listening to the archive

Failing to hear 1

chapter 3|20 pages

(Un)remembering

Countering law's archive – improvisation as social practice

chapter 4|27 pages

Animating the archive

Artefacts of law

chapter 5|19 pages

The file as hypertext

Documents, files and the many worlds of the paper state

chapter 7|16 pages

Constitutions are not enough

Museums as law's counter-archive

chapter 8|21 pages

Archiving victimhood

Practices of inscription in international criminal law

chapter 9|18 pages

The conspiracy archive

Turkey's ‘deep state’ on trial

chapter 10|20 pages

Making a treaty archive

Indigenous rights on the Canadian development frontier

chapter 11|17 pages

Schmitt's Weisheit der Zelle

Rethinking the concept of the political