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The extra-legal effects of international and domestic war crimes
trials continue to puzzle researchers and practitioners. In the
former Yugoslav states, the legacy of conflict and issues of
transitional justice remains central in politics, society and
culture. This book provides a new theoretical and methodological
approach to one of these puzzles: why universal human rights norms
become distorted or undermined when they reach local publics. It
investigates the social and cultural contexts that transitional
justice processes take place in by looking at how emotional
everyday narratives can hamper the spread of norms in society. In
Croatia, these narratives define how the public understands the
rule of law, history and minority rights.
The extra-legal effects of international and domestic war crimes
trials continue to puzzle researchers and practitioners. In the
former Yugoslav states, the legacy of conflict and issues of
transitional justice remains central in politics, society and
culture. This book provides a new theoretical and methodological
approach to one of these puzzles: why universal human rights norms
become distorted or undermined when they reach local publics. It
investigates the social and cultural contexts that transitional
justice processes take place in by looking at how emotional
everyday narratives can hamper the spread of norms in society. In
Croatia, these narratives define how the public understands the
rule of law, history and minority rights.
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