Transitional justice and the public sphere: engagement, legitimacy and contestation
In: Oñati international series in law and society
1. Introduction: The Rational and the Emotional: Issues of Transparency and Legitimacy in Transitional Justice -- Chrisje Brants and Susanne Karstedt -- Part I: Transitional Justice and its Public Spheres: Principles of Justice -- 2. Justice as the Art of Muddling through: The Importance of Nyaya in the Aftermath of International Crimes -- Antony Pemberton and Rianne Letschert -- 3. Emotional Discourse in a Rational Public Sphere: The Victim and the International Criminal Trial -- Chrisje Brants -- 4. Credible Justice and Incredible Crimes -- Susanne Karstedt -- 5. Globalisation, Crime and Governance: Transparency, Accountability and Participation as Principles for Global Criminal Law -- Paul De Hert -- Part II: Justice Seen to Be Done: Courts and the Public -- 6. International Judicial Institutions: (Re)Defining 'Public' Proceedings? -- Olga Kavran -- 7. The Contestation of Complementarity in Uganda: The Case of Thomas Kwoyelo -- Lauren Gould -- 8. Discursive Proceedings and the Transitional Trial: A View from the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia -- Cheryl White -- 9. Unmet Expectations and the Legitimacy of Transitional Justice Institutions: The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia -- Ray Nickson -- Part III: Beyond the Courts: Creating Public Spheres of Testimony -- 10. Witness Testimony and the Incommensurability of Truth in Argentina -- Antonius CGM Robben -- 11. Faces of Truth: Journalism, Justice and War -- Kees Brants and Chrisje Brants -- 12. Memory Laws: Regulating Memory and the Policing of Acknowledgement and Denial -- Marloes van Noorloos -- 13. Challenges to the Movement to Exhume the Missing Victims of the Spanish Civil War and Francoist Dictatorship -- Natalia Maystorovich Chulio -- 14. Portraits of the Dead and the Living: Bosnia and Rwanda 20 Years on -- Olivera Simic