
The latest issue of the
International Journal of Transitional Justice (Vol. 12, no. 3, November 2018) is out. Contents include:
- Articles
- Mattia Cacciatori, When Kings Are Criminals: Lessons from ICC Prosecutions of African Presidents
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Elise Ketelaars, Gendering Tunisia’s Transition: Transformative Gender Justice Outcomes in Times of Transitional Justice Turmoil?
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Claudine Kuradusenge-McLeod, Belgian Hutu Diaspora Narratives of Victimhood and Trauma
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Frédéric Mégret, The Strange Case of the Victim Who Did Not Want Justice
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Shurlee Swain, Both Victim and ‘Perpetrator’: Finding a Voice before Inquiries into Historical Abuse in Out-of-Home Care
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Daniela Jara, Manuela Badilla, Ana Figueiredo, Marcela Cornejo, & Victoria Riveros, Tracing Mapuche Exclusion from Post-Dictatorial Truth Commissions in Chile: Official and Grassroots Initiatives
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Paolo Caroli, The Thin Line between Transitional Justice and Memory Activism: The Case of the German and British ‘Pardons’ for Convicted Homosexuals
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Mihaela Mihai, Architectural Transitional Justice? Political Renewal within the Scars of a Violent Past
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Notes from the Field
- Philipp Schulz, ‘Luk pe Coo,’ or Compensation as Dowry? Gendered Reflections on Reparations for Conflict-Related Sexual Violence against Men
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Thijs B Bouwknegt, Eshetu Alemu: ‘The Black Sheep of the Dergue’ – Ethiopian War Crimes and Universal Jurisdiction in the Netherlands