This class critically examines the phenomenon of transitional justice, surveying the methods used, the problems inherent therein, and the assumptions underlying the application of transitional justice tools.
We will work on case studies, looking at the main actors and institutions. Particular attention will be given to the Colombian transitional justice process.
Students will be required to work individually and in groups.

Credits
4 credits
Pre-requisites
College Level=Junior OR PO1011GE110 OR PO1011CCR OR PO1012
Co-requisites
None

The class familiarizes students with transitional justice mechanisms, and invites students to think critically about the work conducted as well as the social and political capacity of such institutions to deliver on their promises. Designed to stimulate debate over specific cases, the first part of the course will invite students to apply the concepts learned to current situations, imagining where the field will develop from here. The second part will focus on migration, and how asylum courts assesses the notion of truth.

One of the legacies of the 20th century is the ascension of the idea that societies benefit from confronting their past or, put another way, that societies that do not address past injustice or violence risk a return of said violence. Transitional justice, which is the process societies undergo in addressing past injustice as they move from war to peace or from a repressive regime to a democracy, underwrote the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg, South Africa’s lauded truth commission, lustration campaigns following the fall of the iron curtain, and the rise of international criminal justice institutions (from ad hoc tribunals like the tribunals for Yugoslavia and Rwanda to permanent institutions like the International Criminal Court).

While the question of best practices at achieving transitional justice is still hotly debated, it is now generally accepted that truth telling and justice rendering are central aspects of social healing, and necessary for peace and reconciliation following conflict. This class critically examines the phenomenon of transitional justice, surveying the methods used, the problems inherent therein, and the assumptions underlying the application of transitional justice tools. Is truth or justice more important for social reconstruction, and are the two fundamentally at odds? If transitional justice is so rooted in rule of law processes, why is it nearly exclusively practiced by powerful countries

Term
Spring 2021
Discipline
LW (Law)
Day Start Time End Time
Tuesday
10:35
11:55
Type
Regular
Can be taken twice for credit?
Off
Level
Undergraduate
CAMS ID
41568
Code
LW4040
Name
TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE
Start Date
Sunday, January 17 2021
End Date
Tuesday, April 27 2021
Start Month
January
Exam Date
Friday, May 07 2021 - 18:30
Last update with CAMS