Foreword 1 Understanding the impact of transitional justice on peace and democracy 2 Uruguay: The (re)construction of peace and democracy through transitional justice 3 Peru: Transitional justice as a mean, but not an end 4 Rwanda: Peace and partial democracy in the light of transitional justice 5 Angola: Peace but no democracy in the shadow of impunity 6 Conclusions
Elin Skaar is a senior researcher and head of the research cluster
on Rights and Legal Institutions at the Chr. Michelsen Institute
(CMI) in Bergen, Norway. She is currently co-editing a volume
titled Reconceptualizing Transitional Justice: The Latin American
experience, which is due to be published by Routledge in 2015.
Camila Gianella Malca is a postdoctoral scholar at the University
of Bergen and a researcher at the Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI) in
Bergen, Norway. Her research and consultancy work has focused on
maternal mortality, the right to health, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis,
mental health, and transitional justice.
Trine Eide is a PhD candidate in social anthropology at the Arctic
University of Norway (formerly University of Tromsø). Her
dissertation focuses on the Twa people in the peacebuilding process
in Rwanda. She has spent two years following the Rwandan community
court (gacaca) processes, and has published on human rights, ethnic
conflict, and development.
Astri Suhrke is a senior researcher at the Chr. Michelsen Institute
(CMI) in Bergen, Norway, and has written widely on social conflict
and peacebuilding. Her most recent books are The Peace In Between:
Post-war Violence and Peacebuilding (Routledge, 2012, with Mats
Berdal) and When More Is Less: The International Project in
Afghanistan (Hurst, 2011).
"After Violence is a serious attempt to isolate the impact of
transitional justice, written by experts possessing a profound
sensitivity to historical context. I recommend it for all scholars
who are truly grappling with the difficulty of assessing the
contribution transitional justice has made in the world." -
Geoffrey T. Dancy, Professor of Political Science, Tulane
University
"The volume is recommended to scholars interested in peacebuilding,
human rights and democratisation because it presents comparative
approach towards transitional justice, peace and democracy, quality
depiction of the research field as well as worth verifying
inventive explanatory frameworks." - Joanna Rak, Nicolaus
Copernicus University in Toruń, Poland
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