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Call for Papers

"Taking Stock of Transitional Justice"
International Conference
Oxford Transitional Justice Research (OTJR),
University of Oxford
Oxford (UK)
26-28 June 2009

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Oxford Transitional Justice Research (OTJR) invites speaker
submissions for the upcoming conference, “Taking Stock of
Transitional Justice.” This conference, to be held at the
University of Oxford, will critically engage with and
challenge current academic thinking on and the practical
implementation of transitional justice.

Country-specific plenary debates on key themes will
complement a range of indepth, inter-disciplinary panel
sessions. Combined, these discussions will explore some of
the most contentious questions in the field of transitional
justice, including: What has transitional justice achieved
in practical terms? What are the theoretical and empirical
assumptions underpinning transitional justice? How has the
field evolved over time? Has transitional justice
unjustifiably preferenced legal approaches? Should we
understand justice during transition simply in terms of
politics? What is the future of this field? The conference
aims to question and re-orient the thinking around
transitional justice, exploring its moral underpinnings, its
universality and transferability, its objectives and
implementation mechanisms.

Submissions are encouraged from academics, policy makers,
and practitioners, and from individuals based in both the
Global North and South, particularly from countries with
experience of transition. The basis for accepting
submissions will be evidence of critical thinking and new
insights, and varied panels bringing together discipline
areas and specialisations that rarely speak to each other.
Submissions are invited under the following five broad
conference themes:

- Means and Ends: Reconciliation, Truth and Justice:
Sessions under this theme return to the principles
underpinning transitional justice and critique its
theoretical and conceptual basis. Areas for submission
include normative principles of justice, reconciliation,
forgiveness, memory, agency and power.

- Criminal Justice:
This theme interrogates the relationship between criminal
and transitional justice. Assessing the development of
international criminal justice from its domestic roots, the
sessions critically engage with – among other themes – the
use of prosecutorial discretion, the construction of a
criminal case and the principle of complementarity. In
raising questions about the links between national and
international criminal processes, these sessions focus on
the legitimacy of criminal processes during transition.

- Post-Conflict Reconstruction and Transitional Justice:
This theme explores the relationship between transitional
justice and broader post-conflict reconstruction concerns.
It focuses on bringing together areas that are rarely
discussed together, including security, land reform,
institutional reform and justice. Areas for submission
include security sector reform, disarmament, demobilisation
and reintegration (DDR), and land redistribution.

- Reparations:
This theme explores reparations in theory and practice,
raising questions about the nature of victimhood, the
objectives of reparations, and the monitoring and evaluation
of reparations policies. Areas of interest include ‘the
victim’, victimhood, memorialisation, reconciliation and
reparations in practice.

- Local Justice:
Sessions under this theme explore contemporary concerns with
‘local’ justice and justice ‘from below.’ This theme focuses
on the key social objectives with which local justice has
been connected, particularly restoration of fractured
relationships and reconciliation, and the practical efficacy
of local approaches in achieving the ends designated to
them. Areas for submission include conceptualising ‘local’
transitional justice processes, the practical unfolding of
such approaches in specific contexts, and the broader
implications for transitional justice of these local
processes.

Submissions should take the form of a 300-500 word abstract
sent to: <[email protected]> and include author
name, affiliation, contact details, and relevant broad
conference theme(s).

OTJR encourages submissions from established and
early-career researchers, practitioners and policy makers,
who wish to critically engage with the core questions and
concerns of the conference and its sub-themes.

Deadline for submissions: 28 April 2009

For more information, see: http://www.csls.ox.ac.uk/otjr.php


Contact:

Centre for Socio-Legal Studies
Oxford University
Manor Road
Oxford OX1 3UQ
UK
Tel: +44 (0)1865 284220
Fax: +44 (0)1865 284221
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.csls.ox.ac.uk/otjr.php

 
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