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Call for Publications

Theme: Transitional Justice from the Margins
Subtitle: Intersections of Identities, Power and Human Rights
Publication: International Journal of Transitional Justice
Date: Special Issue (2018)
Deadline: 1.7.2017

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This special issue of the International Journal of Transitional
Justice seeks scholarship and practitioners’ reflections that engage
critically with the intersections of transitional justice and social
oppression.

In 2017 the Journal marks its 10th anniversary. We take this
opportunity to open a conversation that raises profound questions
about the status of transitional justice. This starts not from a
series of normative assumptions about truth, justice and
reconciliation but rather from an analysis of how the structure of
the discipline reinforces power dynamics. We plan to examine how
transitional justice intersects with the structural dimensions of
marginalization and oppression.

A central critique of the evolution of transitional justice relates
to the legal framework and discourse of international human rights
law that elevates certain civil and political rights over other
norms, realities and dynamics. Systemic structural inequities become
invisible or relegated to subsequent policy perspectives that
governments or the international community invaribaly push ‘down the
road.’ As these issues often reflect the power dynamics of the state,
they tend to be ignored in favor of maintaining and consolidating the
status quo. The structural nature of social oppressions, often
underlying many gross violations of human rights, and the collective
resistance of those most directly affected by these oppressions,
often appear marginalized by transitional justice frameworks and
discourses.

The operation of power at the intersections of gender, ‘race,’ social
class and/or sexualities is often obscured in the narrow lens of
individually focused violations. Some might suggest that transitional
justice has, at best, an individualized reductionistic relationship
with gender through its hypervisibilization of sexual violence –
contributing to what Canadian scholar Sherene Razack (2007)
characterizes as “stealing the pain of others” – and a blindness to
racism.

Kimberlee Crenshaw (1989) has examined how the focus exclusively on
women as individual victims of a singular injustice may lead to
revictimization by a legal system that continues to prioritize
hegemonic patriarchal and racialised power. Her work – and that of
indigenous scholars and others writing ‘from the margins’ – documents
the structural economic, political and social systems that constrain
minoritized and marginalized communities and their struggles for
justice. Those acting and writing ‘from the margins’ or constructing
knowledge ‘from the bottom up’ challenge those within the
transitional justice field to critically interrogate the current
dominant frameworks.

We seek work that contributes to critically discussing the limits of
the transitional justice framework for understanding the causes and
redressing the effects of social, economic and cultural rights
violations, or explores how transitional justice could/should be
broadened to address such challenges. We particularly welcome
contributions that address intersectionality and its relationship to
violent conflict and political settlements in theory and in practice.
This special issue seeks to focus on work that generates new thinking
or action which centers around scholarship and activist insights that
are grounded in and promote postcolonial or decolonizing knowledge
produced by, or collaboratively with, an increasingly diverse and
complex global community.

Questions that submissions could explore include:

- Does transitional justice need to think beyond human rights
  frameworks in order to address structural inequalities and systems
  of oppression?
- How does the current focus on sexual violence reproduce sexual
  hierarchies in transitional justice interventions, and entrench that
  focus in transitional accountability?
- Where are LGBTQI individuals in the transitional justice
  conversation?
- Is masculinity intersectional?
- How does transitional justice reinforce or critically engage
  categories of identity and forms of hierarchy?
- How might transitional justice be reconfigured if knowledge ‘from
  the margins’ traveled to the center? In what ways can or should
  local or indigenous theory and praxis in postconflict contexts
  reframe transitional justice norms, knowledge and practices?
- What does ‘grassroots’ transitional justice really mean in practice
  and how might it be holistically and meaningfully advanced,
  acknowledging the communities and individuals who advance it?
- Can economic, social and cultural rights be adequately addressed
  through a transitional justice framework?
- How can the silos of development and transitional justice be
  integrated and expanded to encapsulate attention to the power
  differentials that lead to human rights violations?

The deadline for submissions is 1 July 2017.

Papers should be submitted online from the IJTJ webpage at:
http://www.ijtj.oxfordjournals.org

For further information, please contact the Managing Editor at:
[email protected]

The issue will be guest edited by Fionnuala Ní Aoláin and Eilish
Rooney of the Transitional Justice Institute, Ulster University. Ní
Aoláin is Professor of Law at the Transitional Justice Institute and
holds the Robina Chair in Law, Public Policy and Society at the
University of Minnesota Law School. Rooney is a Senior Lecturer in
Ulster’s School of Sociology and Applied Social Studies. She
represents the Transitional Justice Institute on the Transitional
Justice Grassroots Toolkit programme, a university–community
partnership with Bridge of Hope, a community-based organization
focused on supporting persons affected by the conflict in Northern
Ireland. Rooney and Ní Aoláin have collaborated extensively in the
practice and theorizing of intersectionality in transitional justice.


Contact:

Lucy Hovil, Managing Editor
International Journal of Transitional Justice
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.ijtj.oxfordjournals.org




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