1. Setting the Stage; 2. Conflict; 3. Pluralism; 4. Compromise; Conclusion; Select Bibliography; Index.
Offers a pluralist reading of transitional justice to deal with conflicts constructively and to enable diversity in approaches.
Frank Haldemann is an affiliated researcher at the Interdisciplinary Institute of Ethics and Human Rights of the University of Fribourg, Switzerland. He has taught transitional justice for over ten years, and co-directed the Geneva Academy Master in Transitional Justice, Human Rights and the Rule of Law. His research on transitional justice has led him to New York, The Hague and South Africa. He is the co-editor (with Thomas Unger) of The United Nations Principles to Combat Impunity: A Commentary (2018) and has published in journals such as Ratio Juris, Cornell International Law Journal, WestEnd: Neue Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung and Munera: rivista europea di cultura.
'Imbued by an innovative set of insights which are much needed by
transitional justice scholars and practitioners, this book breathes
complexity and imagination. It forces the reader to question
fundamental orthodoxies about transitional justice theory and
practice by listening to the difficult, uncomfortable realities of
political and legal compromise in transitional settings. It
embraces intricacy, does not give easy answers, and is quite simply
the best transitional justice book I have read in a very long
time.' Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, University of Minnesota and The Queens
University of Belfast
'This book is an invaluable companion to unlearning the dogmas
sedimented into the normative common sense of 'transitional
justice'. With intellectual dexterity and a pluralistic ethos,
Haldemann unsettles the monism and rigid legalism that have
accompanied the field's institutionalization, overstated its
coherence, and denied its imbrication in a neo-imperial machinery
of global governance.' Vasuki Nesiah, New York University
'In this important new book, Haldemann raises hard questions and
offers thoughtful insights about the past, present and future of
transitional justice. His book is a tonic for those who believe not
only in accountability, but also in prevention and the messy middle
ground that peace depends upon.' Mark Freeman, Executive Director,
Institute for Integrated Transitions
'Thoughtful and erudite, Frank Haldemann's masterful reflection on
transitional justice demonstrates the complexity of the environment
and the fallacy of a search for simplistic responses. The best may
be the enemy of the good, he reminds us. Practitioners must learn
to think like a fox, not a hedgehog.' William Schabas, Middlesex
University
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