Context, Timing and the Dynamics of Transitional Justice: A Historical Perspective
Author: Laurel Fletcher and Harvey Weinstein, with Jamie Rowen
Date: 2009
Size:
59 pages
(400 KB)
Access full text: available online
This article from the Human Rights Quarterly questions the presumption that trials and/or truth commissions should be an early response in initiating a transitional justice process. A multi-factorial, qualitative analysis of seven case studies suggests the need for a fuller appreciation of the dynamic system in which transitional justice interventions occur. It is important to consider what the affected society wants and how a response can be tailored to the particular cultural, social, and economic contexts.
Transitional justice involves processes of transformation that may be initiated or supported by particular interventions. While it has been expedient to institute trials (local or international) and/or truth commissions, neither mechanism is guaranteed to resolve these underlying structural and social causes that led to the violence. Attention to the underlying socioeconomic disparities and inequalities in the country, in conjunction with structural change in the way that the country is governed, may be the most important first steps in developing an appropriate response to perpetrators of violence.
The principal factors that influence the choice and timing of trials and truth commissions are: (1) a country’s capacity for autonomous resolution of conflict and self-determination with regard to transitional justice mechanisms; (2) the legacy of colonialism, and (3) the cultures and traditions of a country. Other issues raised include the following:
New thinking is required about the relationship of justice to societal transitions; the current analytical framework through which transitional justice measures are promoted should be reframed. The following guiding principles are recommended:
Access full text: available online
Source:
Fletcher, L. and Weinstein, H., with Rowan, J., 2009, 'Context, Timing and the Dynamics of Transitional Justice: A Historical Perspective', Human Rights Quarterly 31, pp 163-220
Author:
Laurel Fletcher
, lfletcher[at]law.berkeley.edu
;
Harvey Weinstein
, harveyw[at]berkeley.edu