
The latest issue of the
International Journal of Transitional Justice (Vol. 19, no. 1, February 2025) is out. Contents include:
-
Editorial
-
Kelebogile Zvobgo & Francesca Parente, The Afterlives of Transitional Justice
- Special Issue: The Afterlives of Transitional Justice
- Onur Bakiner, ‘The Strength Even to Comprehend the Incomprehensible’: Rereading Adorno in the Age of Authoritarian Resurgence
-
Geoff Dancy & Oskar Timo Thoms, Transitional Justice and the Problem of Democratic Decline
-
Cynthia M Horne, Public Attitudes toward On-Going Transitional Justice in Latvia: Sometimes More Isn’t Better
-
Sofie Budhoo, Divisive Documents: Exploring the Local Impact of Legal Documents in Transitional Justice Contexts
-
Michal Ben-Josef Hirsch & Jennifer M Dixon, The State of Repair: The International Norm of Reparations between Aspirations and Expectations
-
Ulrike Lühe & Erin Baines, Difficult Stories that Haunt: Towards Research Otherwise in Transitional Justice
-
Noha Aboueldahab, Breaking the Echo Chambers of Transitional Justice and TWAIL: An Intellectual and Policy Exchange
-
Tine Destrooper & Elke Evrard, The (Many) Afterlives of Transitional Justice: Practice-based Insights on Continuity, Impact and Evolving Justice Struggles
-
Notes from the Field
-
María Paula Prada Ramírez & Leslie Wingender, Listening and Preparing the Society to Engage: The Case of the Colombian Truth Commission and Its Legacy Strategy
-
Review Essay
- Cath Collins & Selbi Durdiyeva, ‘Too Long a Sacrifice?’: Post-Transitional Justice and the Afterlives of Authoritarianism