Reframing Transitional Justice
Innovations, Boundaries, and Refractions
Mark A Drumbl editor Kirsten J Fisher editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publishing:20th Apr '26
£145.00
This title is due to be published on 20th April, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This book challenges the simplicity, predestination, and self-evident nature of the contemporary narratives of transitional justice.
Transitional justice is the field of study that examines how states should reckon with massive human rights abuses. The book upends these assumptive narratives on three crucial fronts. The first front is that of innovations. Here, the book questions the ability of transitional justice to deliver tangible successes in an era of rapid and overwhelming technological change and contestation over what constitutes human memory, communicative dialogue, and reliable evidence. The second front involves boundaries. Here the book confronts the professed superpower of transitional justice to do more and more, in an endless concatenation of additives. While there is cause for optimism, this book also suggests that transitional justice remains awkward in how it copes with the existential pressures of environmental, health, and cultural crises. On its third front, refractions, this book identifies how transitional justice addresses racism, misogyny, and democratic backsliding. Throughout, the book asks readers to imagine where the field and practice of transitional justice could go from here – what new innovations are required, what boundaries must be stretched or retrenched, and what perspectives need to be considered due to new ways of seeing current and past atrocities.
Accordingly, this book will be of considerable interest to academics, practitioners working on post-conflict reconstruction, ranging from undergraduate to post-doctoral studies in the areas of law, politics, cultural property, criminology, human rights, international relations, and technology studies.
This provocative and timely volume productively confronts the transitional justice paradigm with trenchant reappraisal in light of emerging digital technologies, structural violence, and theories of justice from the periphery. It asks us to rethink how, when, as well as by and for whom is transitional justice made accessible.
Laurel Fletcher, Chancellor’s Clinical Professor of Law, University of California, Berkeley (USA)
Reframing Transitional Justice is an interdisciplinary collection, covering multiple cases, that gives transitional justice exactly what it needs - a good shake. This shake-up questions transitional justice as a field and set of tools that have come of age, become too formulaic and too aligned to the status quo, while suggesting alternative futures. Critique is balanced with proposition. The result is a wonderful set of provocations to us all, and one that I recommend to all those seeking to shape a creative, responsive, and questioning transitional justice.
Professor Paul Gready, Director, Centre for Applied Human Rights, University of York (UK)
ISBN: 9781041097709
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
360 pages