1st Edition
Transitional Justice Theories
Transitional Justice Theories: An Introduction Susanne Buckley-Zistel, Teresa Koloma Beck, Christian Braun, and Friederike Mieth Part One: Theorizing Transitional Justice Chapter 1 Transformative Justice, Reconciliation, and Peacebuilding Wendy Lambourne Chapter 2 Rethinking Reconciliation in Divided Societies: A Social Learning Theory of Transitional Justice Nevin T. Aiken Chapter 3 The Plural Justice Aims of Reparations Lisa J. Laplante Chapter 4 Political Liberalism after Mass Violence: John Rawls and a ‘Theory’ of Transitional Justice Kora Andrieu Chapter 5 The Vertical and Horizontal Expansion of Transitional Justice: Explanations and Implications for a Contested Field Thomas Obel Hansen Part Two Exploring the Limits of Transitional Justice Chapter 6 Bargaining Justice: A Theory of Transitional Justice Compliance Jelena Subotić Chapter 7 Narrative Truths: On the Construction of the Past in Truth Commissions Susanne Buckley-Zistel Chapter 8 Redressive Politics and the Nexus of Trauma, Transitional Justice, and Reconciliation Magdalena Zolkos Chapter 9 Forgetting the Embodied Past: Body Memory in Transitional Justice Teresa Koloma Beck Chapter 10 Understanding the Political Economy of Transitional Justice: A Critical Theory Perspective Hannah Franzki and Maria Carolina Olarte
Biography
The editors are based at the Centre for Conflict Studies, at Philipps University, Marburg
"The breadth of contributions and the variety of approaches make Transitional Justice Theories a thought-provoking book and an important resource for those interested in the theoretical aspect of transitional justice"
- Marcos Zunnio, Queens College Cambridge, UK
"This volume covers an impressive breadth of conceptual discussion of transitional justice."
-Rita Shackel, Current Issues in Criminal Justice
"Overall, Transitional Justice Theories is packed with consistently informative, engaging, and thought-provoking essays that are sure to grab the attention of anyone interested in justice on an international scale. The fact that the volume approaches transitional justice theory and its problems from a multi-disciplinary standpoint ensures a greater potential for the proliferation of discourse within this area that is able to respond to the issues raised by the authors. The book's authors refrain from attempts at drawing conclusions to theoretical transitional justice, and instead issues are often left open to the interpolation of alternative or less congenial ways of thinking about the dominance of Western legal discourse within the transitional justice framework, offering the opportunity for further scholarly discussion and development."
-Pedram Esfandiary, Nottingham Trent University, Internet Journal of Criminology






