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Call for Publications

Theme: Theorizing Transitional Justice
Publication: Edited Volume
Deadline: 15.9.2012

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The field of Transitional Justice – the interdisciplinary study of
how countries emerge from civil strife and mass atrocity – has grown
exponentially in recent years.

From the painful tradeoffs between peace and justice involved in the
work of South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, to the
surprising success of the International Criminal Tribunal for
Yugoslavia; from Rwanda's innovative, controversial experiment in
traditional criminal justice to the recent prominent indictments made
by the International Criminal Court in the Hague – the field offers
one of the most fascinating and politically important opportunities
for scholars and practitioners to combine their insights and shape
international norms of conduct. Nevertheless, actual transitional
justice practices often fail to take a broad, systemic approach to
political repair. For instance, while retributive justice measures
play a crucial role in addressing past human rights abuses, when
these measures are not supplemented by further initiatives
reconstructing the social texture, their efficacy in promoting a
transition to civil society remains questionable. Indeed, the study
of transitional justice itself suffers from a similar shortcoming and
remains significantly under-theorized. Few attempts have been made to
explore the theoretical questions and conceptual problems that cut
across the different disciplinary inquiries.

The purpose of this volume is to contribute to this important
conceptual effort and to generate at least the contours of a theory
of transitional justice. We invite philosophers, political theorists,
lawyers, historians and other theoretically-minded scholars and
practitioners to submit abstracts pertaining, broadly, to the themes
listed below:

- The genealogy of transitional justice (how the field emerged as a
  field, how central concepts developed)

- The nature of transitional justice (how it is different or the same
  as other forms of justice)

- The scope of transitional justice (after war, during war, in a
  functioning democracy, inter-state, intra-state)

- Methodological questions in transitional justice (types of
  contributions from the humanities, social sciences)

- Instruments of transitional justice: normative and political
  considerations re war crime tribunals, truth commissions,
  administrative purges, reparations, historical commissions

- The purpose and impact of transitional justice (do policies of
  transitional justice have a goal? Set of goals? Are some goals more
  appropriate than others?) How do we assess the success of policies
  of transitional justice?

- The dilemmas of transitional justice (peace vs. justice etc.)

- Skeptical considerations: are there cases when transitional justice
  is best abandoned / not taken up?

- Transitional Justice as an emerging norm of international conduct:
  a harbinger of cosmopolitan world order?

Contributors are invited to submit a 250-500 word abstract by
September 15, 2012 to <[email protected]> along with
a brief bio paragraph.

The editors will collect selected abstracts into a proposal to
publishers, with writing commitments due by September 15, 2013.

Editors:
Claudio Corradetti, European Academy of Bolzano
Nir Eisikovits, Suffolk University, Boston
Jack Rotondi, Suffolk University, Boston




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