Part I. Determinants of Transitional Justice: 1. Transitional justice and political goods Brian Grodsky; 2. Transitional justice as electoral politics Robert Austin; 3. Explaining late lustration programs: lessons from the Polish case Aleks Szczerbiak; Part II. The Impact of Transitional Justice: 4. The adoption and impact of transitional justice Moira Lynch and Bridget Marchesi; 5. Transitional justice effects in the Czech Republic Roman David; Part III. Key Challenges: 6. The timing of transitional justice measures Cynthia M. Horne; 7. The challenge of competing pasts Monica Ciobanu; 8. Beyond the national: pathways of diffusion Helga A. Welsh; 9. The mythologizing of communist violence Jelena Subotic; Part IV. History, Justice, and Public Memory: 10. Post-communist truth commissions: between transitional justice and the politics of history Andrew Beattie; 11. Public memory, commemoration, and transitional justice: reconfiguring the past in public space Duncan Light and Craig Young; 12. Stories we tell: documentary theater, performance, and justice in transition Olivera Simic; 13. Vigilante justice and unofficial truth projects Lavinia Stan.
Explores how the former communist regimes of Central and Eastern Europe have grappled with the serious human rights violations of past regimes.
Lavinia Stan is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at St Francis Xavier University, Canada. She is an associate editor of the peer-reviewed Women's Studies International Forum and, most recently, the co-author or co-editor of Transitional Justice in Post-Communist Romania (2013); Church, State and Democracy in the Expanding Europe (with Lucian Turcescu, 2011); and the three-volume Encyclopedia of Transitional Justice (with Nadya Nedelsky, 2013). Stan is also the author of more than fifty peer-reviewed articles published in the European Political Science Journal, Problems of Post-Communism, Communist and Post-Communist Politics, and Europe-Asia Studies. Nadya Nedelsky is Associate Professor of International Studies at Macalester College. She is the author of Defining the Sovereign Community: National Identity, Individual Rights, and Minority Membership in the Czech and Slovak Republics (2009) and the co-editor of the three-volume Encyclopedia of Transitional Justice (with Lavinia Stan, 2013). She is author of the national report on the Czech and Slovak republics titled How the Memory of Crimes Committed by Totalitarian Regimes in Europe is Dealt with in the Member States commissioned by the European Commission Directorate General of Justice, Freedom and Security.
'This volume succeeds in presenting a coherent and nuanced account
of the post-1989 experience of CEE with dealing with the past. It
speaks of several commonalities with regard to not only political
manipulations of truth and memory, the abuses and misuses of
transitional justice for scapegoating or political legitimacy, the
role of liminality and transcendence, but also of the trade-off
between truth and democratic development. It convincingly shows
that transitional justice in CEE is much broader than the topic of
lustration and offers numeric shades of grey to each of the
attempted policies of reckoning.' Jessie Hronesova, Nationalities
Papers
'I believe that Stan and Nedelsky's ambitious and systematic book
is bound to become a work of reference for scholars of transitional
justice and area studies, and for political theorists alike. Since
the volume forwards the understanding of transitional justice in
several different ways, it is also not difficult to see it included
in reading lists for advanced seminars or lectures in transitional
justice or political theory.' Liviu Damsa, Europe-Asia Studies
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