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Resistance and Transitional Justice

Edited by: Briony Jones, Julie Bernath

ISBN13: 9780367232238
Published: April 2019
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback (Hardback in 2017)
Price: £43.99
Hardback edition , ISBN13 9780415785044



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Despite a more reflective concern over the past twenty years with marginalised voices, justice from below, power relations, and the legitimacy of mechanisms and processes, scholarship on transitional justice has remained relatively silent on the question of ‘resistance’. In response, this book asks what can be learnt by engaging with resistance to transitional justice not just as a problem of process, but as a necessary element of transitional justice. Drawing on literatures about resistance from geography and anthropology it is the social act of labelling resistance, along with subjective nature, that is addressed here as part of the political, economic, social and cultural contexts in which transitional justice processes unfold.

Working through three cases – Côte d’Ivoire, Burundi and Cambodia – each chapter of the book addresses a different form or meaning of resistance, from the vantage point of multiple actors. As such, each chapter adds a different element to an overall argument that disrupts the norm/deviancy dichotomy that has so far characterized the limited work on resistance and transitional justice. Together, then, the chapters of the book develop cross-cutting themes that elaborate an overall argument for considering resistance to transitional justice as a subjective element of a political process rather than as a problem of implementation.

Contents:
1. Resistance and Transitional Justice
Briony Jones and Julie Bernath
2. Researching Resistance to Transitional Justice
Briony Jones and Julie Bernath

I Côte d’Ivoire
3. Resistance to Transitional Justice in the Context of Political Violence in Côte d’Ivoire
Adou Djane Dit Fatagoma
4. Seeking a ‘Just Justice’: Discursive Strategies of Resistance in Côte d’Ivoire
Briony Jones

II Burundi
5. Transitional Justice in Burundi: Political Decision Makers between Resistance and Cooption
Sandra Rubli
6. Civil Society Organisations and Transitional Justice in Burundi: When Making is
Resisting
Gérard Birantamije

III Cambodia
7. Resisting and Negotiating Victim Subjectivities in Civil Party Participation at the
Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC), Julie Bernath
8. Multivocal Resistance to Transitional Justice in Post‐Genocide Cambodia, Kosal Path
9. Reflections, Briony Jones and Julie Bernath