Transitional justice Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Transitional Justice (TJ) – A set of judicial and non‑judicial actions taken after conflict or authoritarian rule to address large‑scale human‑rights violations and prevent their recurrence.
Judicial Measures – Criminal prosecutions, hybrid courts, and international tribunals that hold perpetrators accountable.
Non‑Judicial Measures – Truth commissions, reparations (material & symbolic), apologies, memorials, and institutional reforms (vetting, lustration, DDR).
Rule of Law & Democracy – TJ aims to rebuild trust, legitimize new governments, and embed democratic norms.
Peace vs. Justice Debate – “Peace school” favors amnesties/negotiations to end violence; “Justice school” stresses accountability to stop impunity.
📌 Must Remember
Four Pillars of TJ: Truth‑seeking, Criminal accountability, Reparations, Institutional reform.
Primary Goal: End impunity & embed rule of law in a democratic framework.
Key Objectives:
Halt ongoing abuses.
Build social trust.
Recognize victims’ dignity.
Identify & sanction perpetrators.
Provide material/symbolic reparations.
Reform security & judicial institutions.
Major Mechanisms:
International Criminal Court (ICC) – Tries genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity when national courts can’t.
Hybrid Courts – Blend international & domestic judges (e.g., Sierra Leone, Cambodia).
Truth Commissions – Fact‑finding bodies that publish official reports.
Lustration vs. Vetting:
Lustration – Legal removal of former regime officials.
Vetting – Screening for suitability; may result in retention, retraining, or dismissal.
Reparations Types:
Material – Money, land, health care.
Symbolic – Apologies, memorials.
Individual vs. Collective – Targeted to persons or whole communities.
🔄 Key Processes
Design Phase – Assess context, set goals (truth, accountability, reparations, reform).
Sequencing Decision – Choose order:
Truth‑seeking → Prosecutions → Reparations (common)
Or Prosecutions → Truth‑seeking (when security permits).
Implementation Steps
Truth Commission: Collect testimonies → Draft report → Public hearings → Recommendations.
Criminal Prosecution: Investigation → Indictment (national or ICC) → Trial → Judgment & sentencing.
Reparations Program: Victim identification → Define eligibility → Allocate resources → Disburse (material) & conduct symbolic acts.
Institutional Reform: Vetting/lustration → Personnel changes → Training on human‑rights standards → Ongoing oversight.
Monitoring & Evaluation – Track outcomes against objectives (trust levels, recidivism, victim satisfaction).
🔍 Key Comparisons
Truth Commissions vs. Criminal Trials
Truth: Non‑judicial, focuses on facts & narrative, offers public acknowledgment.
Trials: Judicial, seeks punishment & deterrence, may be slower.
Material vs. Symbolic Reparations
Material: Tangible compensation (money, land).
Symbolic: Apologies, memorials, public ceremonies.
Lustration vs. Vetting
Lustration: Automatic removal of certain former officials.
Vetting: Case‑by‑case assessment; can lead to retention with reforms.
ICC vs. Hybrid Courts
ICC: Permanent, universal jurisdiction (when national courts fail).
Hybrid: Temporary, combines domestic & international law for specific conflicts.
⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“TJ = only criminal trials.” → Wrong; TJ is holistic, includes truth‑seeking, reparations, reforms.
“Amnesties always undermine justice.” → Not always; limited amnesties can be part of a negotiated peace if coupled with other TJ measures.
“All victims receive reparations.” → Resource constraints often limit full coverage; programs prioritize the most vulnerable.
“Hybrid courts replace national courts.” → They supplement, not replace, domestic capacity.
🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“Justice Puzzle” – Think of TJ as a puzzle: each piece (truth, trial, reparations, reform) must fit together for the whole picture of sustainable peace.
“Ripple Effect” – Accountability (trial) sends a deterrent ripple; truth‑telling creates a healing ripple; reparations restore the victim’s base; reforms prevent future ripples of abuse.
🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Child‑Sensitive TJ: Standard mechanisms often overlook children; special interview protocols & educational reparations may be needed.
Victor’s Justice: When only the winning side controls TJ, processes may be biased; international oversight can mitigate.
Resource‑Starved Settings: May need to prioritize low‑cost symbolic reparations and community‑based truth initiatives.
📍 When to Use Which
Criminal Prosecution – Use for the most serious crimes (genocide, war crimes) where evidence is strong and courts are functional.
Truth Commission – Deploy when societies need a shared narrative, especially if many low‑level perpetrators exist.
Reparations – Implement when victims are identifiable and resources exist; prioritize material for severe loss, symbolic for collective trauma.
Lustration – Apply in post‑authoritarian contexts where former regime officials pose a security risk.
Hybrid Court – Opt when national judiciary lacks capacity but the conflict has strong domestic elements.
👀 Patterns to Recognize
“Justice Cascade” – A surge in countries adopting TJ tools (truth commissions, trials) after the Cold War.
“Peace‑Justice Trade‑off” – Early amnesties often correlate with short‑term stability but may jeopardize long‑term rule of law.
“Victim‑Centered Language” – Successful TJ programs consistently use victim testimonies in reports and public statements.
🗂️ Exam Traps
Confusing “lustration” with “vetting.” – Remember: lustration = forced removal; vetting = assessment.
Assuming ICC always intervenes. – ICC acts only when national courts are unwilling or unable.
Overstating the impact of symbolic reparations. – While important for healing, they rarely substitute for material compensation.
Choosing “peace first” as a universal rule. – The optimal sequence varies by context; blanket statements are penalized.
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