Introduction
Elias O. Opongo and Tim Murithi
1 Election Financing and Violence: Implication for Transitional Justice in Nigeria, Kenya and Sierra Leone
Elias O. Opongo
2 Media and Electoral Violence in Kenya and Nigeria: Holding Journalists Accountable in Transitional Justice Processes
Joseph Olusegun Adebayo
3 Electoral Systems, Election Outcomes and Legal Frameworks: A Challenge to Transitional Justice Process in South Sudan, Rwanda and Uganda
C.A. Mumma-Martinon
4 Youth and Electoral Violence in Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo: Establishing Political Accountability in Transitional Justice contexts
Patrick Hajayandi
5 Women in Politics: Gender, Security and Transitional Justice in Electoral Processes in Africa
Lanoi Maloiy
6 Electoral Observation and Transitional Justice in Southern Africa: A Comparative Analysis of Zimbabwe and Angola
Clever Chikwanda
7 The International Criminal Court and Electoral Justice in Kenya and Côte d’Ivoire
Elias O. Opongo
8 Transitional Justice and the Mitigation of Electoral Violence through Amani Mashinani Model in Uasin Gishu County, Kenya
Susan Mbula Kilonzo
9 Electoral Processes as Platforms for Transitional Justice: Rethinking Governance Systems in Africa
Tim Murithi
Conclusion: Elections, Transitional Justice and the Way Forward
Tim Murithi and Elias O. Opongo
Index
Elias O. Opongo is a senior lecturer at Hekima Institute of Peace
Studies and International Relations, Hekima University College,
Nairobi, Kenya, and the director of the Centre for Research,
Training and Publications at the same university. He holds a PhD in
Peace Studies from the University of Bradford, UK, and MA in
International Peace Studies from University of Notre Dame, USA.
Opongo, a Jesuit priest, is also a conflict analyst and peace
practitioner, and his research focus is in the areas of
transitional justice, peacebuilding and conflict resolution,
democracy and state building.
Tim Murithi is Head, Peacebuilding Interventions Programme,
Institute for Justice and Reconciliation, Cape Town, South Africa;
Extraordinary Professor of African Studies, University of the Free
State; and Research Associate, Institute for Democracy, Citizenship
and Public Policy in Africa, University of Cape Town. He has over
26 years of experience in conflict resolution, peacebuilding,
security, governance, transitional justice, and societal
transformation in Africa.
"Through electoral violence, power is exercised and wealth amassed. Democracy is distorted.In many African countries, violence before, during and after elections has become a regrettable norm rather than the exception. Traversing a wide array of cases, this book’s contributors argue that transitional justice offers an approach to mitigate against electoral violence through institutional reforms and political accountability. Politicians, parliamentarians, peace practitioners and academics will benefit from their timely and incisive insights."Prof. Anthoni at University of Witswatersrand, South Africa
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