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This volume is an inter-disciplinary scholarly resource bringing
together contributions from writers, experienced academics and
practitioners working in fields such as human rights, humanitarian
law, public policy, psychology, cultural and peace studies, and
earth jurisprudence. This collection of essays presents the most up
to date knowledge and status of the field of transitional justice,
and also highlights the emerging debates in this area, which are
often overseen and underdeveloped in the literature. The volume
provides a wide coverage of the arguments relating to controversial
issues emanating from different regions of the world. The book is
divided into four parts which groups different aspects of the
problems and issues facing transitional justice as a field, and its
processes and mechanisms more specifically. Part I concentrates on
the traditional means and methods of dealing with past gross abuses
of power and political violence. In this section, the authors also
expand and often challenge the ways that these processes and
mechanisms are conceptualised and introduced. Part II provides a
forum for the contributors to share their first hand experiences of
how traditional and customary mechanisms of achieving justice can
be effectively utilised. Part III includes a collection of essays
which challenges existing transitional justice models and provides
new lenses to examine the formal and traditional processes and
mechanisms. It aims to expose insufficiencies and some of the
inherent practical and jurisprudential problems facing the field.
Finally, Part IV, looks to the future by examining what remedies
can be available today for abuses of rights of the future
generations and those who have no standing to claim their rights,
such as the environment.
This volume is an inter-disciplinary scholarly resource
bringing together contributions from writers, experienced
academics and practitioners working in fields such as human rights,
humanitarian law, public policy, psychology, cultural and peace
studies, and earth jurisprudence. This collection of essays
presents the most up to date knowledge and status of the field of
transitional justice, and also highlights the emerging
debates in this area, which are often overseen and underdeveloped
in the literature. The volume provides a wide coverage of the
arguments relating to controversial issues emanating from different
regions of the world. The book is divided into four
parts which groups different aspects of the problems and
issues facing transitional justice as a field, and its processes
and mechanisms more specifically. Part IÂ concentrates on the
traditional means and methods of dealing with past gross abuses of
power and political violence. In this section, the
authors also expand and often challenge the ways that these
processes and mechanisms are conceptualised and introduced.
Part II provides a forum for the contributors to share their
first hand experiences of how traditional and customary mechanisms
of achieving justice can be effectively utilised.
Part III includes a collection of essays which challenges
existing transitional justice models and provides new lenses
to examine the formal and traditional processes and mechanisms. It
aims to expose insufficiencies and some of the inherent practical
and jurisprudential problems facing the field. Finally, Part IV,
looks to the future by examining what remedies can be available
today for abuses of rights of the future generations and those who
have no standing to claim their rights, such as the environment.
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