Confronting Past Human Rights Violations

Front Cover
Routledge, 2004 M08 12 - 248 pages
This book examines what makes accountability for previous violations more or less possible for transitional regimes to achieve. It closely examines the other vital goals of such regimes against which accountability is often balanced. The options available are not simply prosecution or pardon, as the most heated polemics of the debate over transitional justice suggest, but a range of options from complete amnesty through truth commissions and lustration or purification to prosecutions. The question, then, is not whether or not accountability can be achieved, but what degree of accountability can be achieved by a given country.
The focus of the book is on the politics of transition: what makes accountability more or less feasible and what strategies are deployed by regimes to achieve greater accountability (or alternatively, greater reform). The result is a more nuanced understanding of the different conditions and possibilities that countries face, and the lesson that there is no one-size-fits-all prescription that can be handed to transitional regimes.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 What makes accountability possible?
21
2 Global experiences in transitional justice
40
3 El Salvador
82
4 Argentina
112
5 Honduras
133
6 South Africa
154
7 Sri Lanka
179
Conclusion
211
Bibliography
222
Index
235
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About the author (2004)

Chandra Lekha Sriram is a lecturer in the School of International Relations at the University of St Andrews, where she teaches international relations and international law, and human rights. She obtained her doctorate from Princeton University in 2000.

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