Preferences
In: A Primer on Environmental Decision-Making, S. 109-122
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In: A Primer on Environmental Decision-Making, S. 109-122
In: Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems; Preferences in Negotiations, S. 73-110
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of International Studies
"Risk Preferences and War" published on by Oxford University Press.
In: The Preference-Driven Lead User Method for New Product Development, S. 55-81
In: Samuelsonian Economics and the Twenty-First Century, S. 99-115
In: Financial Engineering for Low-Income Households, S. 40-49
In: Evaluation and Decision Models with Multiple Criteria, S. 35-87
Transitional justice is argued to become less important as national courts assume international jurisdiction. The indicators of emotion's causal role in shaping transitional justice are explored in transitions to democracy & the decay of retributive emotions. Five emotions are asserted to map into legal & administrative reactions that contrast with reasons for interest based preferences in transitional justice. The dilemmas of transmutation of one motivation into another are asserted to be resolved in new democracies. The formation of preferences that generate a demand for or resistance to transitional justice are linked to the location of the agents in the autocratic political system that preceded the transition. Future transitional justice will be shaped by international institutions as national institutions & the preferences of domestic actors become less decisive. References. J. Harwell
In: Organization and Economic Behaviour
In: International Series in Operations Research & Management Science; Evaluation and Decision Models with Multiple Criteria, S. 67-116
In: Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems; Preferences in Negotiations, S. 15-72