Localising Memory in Transitional Justice: The Dynamics and Informal Practices of Memorialisation after Mass Violence and Dictatorship
Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgments -- General introduction -- Part I Memory and transitional justice -- Chapter 1 International memory entrepreneurs' prescriptions for the remembrance of the Srebrenica genocide: What implications for local understandings of collective victimhood? -- Chapter 2 Transitional justice principles versus survivors' experience: Conflicting interpretations in Kosovo case study involving missing persons and their memorialisation -- Part II Memory dynamics in transitional justice -- Chapter 3 The micro-politics of remembering "the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi" in Rwanda: On the anonymous dead in Karongi district, western Rwanda -- Chapter 4 Bottom-up and thought-provoking sites of memory -- Chapter 5 Informal commemoration in post-war Burundi: Exploring the usefulness and the limits of the concept -- Chapter 6 The struggle to remember: Rhodes Must Fall in South Africa -- Part III Localised memory in transitional justice -- Chapter 7 Place-bound proximity at Rwanda's genocide memorials: On coming home to the dead and the affective force of their remains -- Chapter 8 Missing people and missing stories in the aftermath of genocide: Reclaiming local memories at the places of suffering -- Chapter 9 Music, testimony, and emotional engagement in alternative memorial ceremonies in Palestine-Israel -- Epilogue: Localising memory and reinventing the present -- Index.