Transformative transitional justice and the malleability of post-conflict states / Padraig McAuliffe.
2017
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Title
Transformative transitional justice and the malleability of post-conflict states / Padraig McAuliffe.
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Imprint
Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Pub., 2017.
Description
1 online resource (368 pages) ; cm
Formatted Contents Note
Contents: Preface
1. Introduction: acknowledging the complexities of post-conflict socio-economic justice
2. Transitional justice's transformative turn: how we got here, what we know and what we don't
3. Transitional opportunity? how peace negotiations and power-sharing impede root cause approaches
4. Transitional justice, liberal peacebuilding and the endogenous determinants of transformation
5. 'Trickle-up justice?': the impact of bottom-up justice beyond the local
6. Conclusion: lesson's learned, lessons spurned
Index.
1. Introduction: acknowledging the complexities of post-conflict socio-economic justice
2. Transitional justice's transformative turn: how we got here, what we know and what we don't
3. Transitional opportunity? how peace negotiations and power-sharing impede root cause approaches
4. Transitional justice, liberal peacebuilding and the endogenous determinants of transformation
5. 'Trickle-up justice?': the impact of bottom-up justice beyond the local
6. Conclusion: lesson's learned, lessons spurned
Index.
Summary
Despite the growing focus on issues of socio-economic transformation in contemporary transitional justice, the path dependencies imposed by the political economy of war-to-peace transitions and the limitations imposed by weak statehood are seldom considered. This book explores transitional justice's prospects for seeking economic justice and reform of structures of poverty in the specific context of post-conflict states. Systematic and timely, this book examines how the evolution of contemporary civil war, the modalities of peacemaking and peacebuilding, as well as the role of grassroots forms of justice, condition prospects for tackling the economic roots of conflict. It argues that discourse in the area focuses too much on the liberal commitments of interveners to the exclusion of understanding how interventionist impulses are compromised by the agency of local actors. Ultimately, the book illustrates that for transitional justice to become effective in transforming structures of injustice, it needs to acknowledge the salience of domestic political incentives and accumulation patterns. Transitional justice scholars will find this book indispensable as the first consideration of transitional justice and economic transformation from the perspective of the domestic political economy. Both peacebuilding and development specialists will also benefit from its wealth of lessons to be learned.
Note
Includes index.
Source of Description
Description based on print record.
Location
WWW
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Alternate Title
Elgaronline.
Language
English
ISBN
9781783470044 e-book
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