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Exploring ways of including human rights narratives of refugees in transitional justice and peacebuilding processes through storytelling: narratives from Dukwi refugee campMatenge, Mavis 12 November 2013 (has links)
Post-violence periods present sub-Saharan African countries emerging from violence with the challenges of social reconstruction, the rebuilding of peace and the redressing of legacies of human rights violations. To respond to these challenges, these countries are increasingly utilising truth and reconciliation commissions. To date ten truth commissions have been established in the sub-Saharan African region. With varying mandates, the truth commissions have in their specific contexts provided public spaces to survivors of human rights violations to give voice to their personal narratives, and shed light on the forms of persecution they faced. Often missing from the work of these commissions are stories of refugees living in camps. This is an unfortunate exclusion by a transitional justice process because refugees represent a group adversely affected by rights violations. So far in sub-Saharan Africa only the Kenyan, Liberian and Sierra Leonean commissions have incorporated some of their refugee populations in their proceedings. Driven away from their homes and countries by armed strife and other forms of persecution, the stories of sub-Saharan African refugees continue to bear witness to their human rights plight. Their exclusion in the proceedings of most truth commissions is a glaring omission in the work set to champion human rights and consolidate post-violence peace and justice initiatives.
Therefore, working with 33 male and female adult refugees living in Dukwi Refugee Camp in Botswana, this narrative study sought to find answers to this exclusion by exploring avenues of inclusion of refugees’ voices, perspectives and lived human rights experiences in the work of truth commissions. Participants came from sub-Saharan African countries which included DR Congo, Somalia and Zimbabwe. An analysis of the interview narratives revealed several key findings. Among others, these findings included the importance of recognising refugees as co-partners in peacebuilding. They also underscored the importance of having responsible democratic leadership promote a culture of peace and human rights and combat perpetrators impunity in post-violence African countries. The study demonstrated that future truth commissions can create opportunities to incorporate refugees’ human rights narratives and give refugees the space to offer solutions for the redress of rights violations and suggestions for promoting durable peace.
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Restorative Justice and Political Forgiveness: A Comparative Study of Truth and Reconciliation CommissionsAyee, Gloria Yayra Ayorkor January 2016 (has links)
<p>This research project involves a comparative, cross-national study of truth and reconciliation commissions (TRCs) in countries around the world that have used these extra-judicial institutions to pursue justice and promote national reconciliation during periods of democratic transition or following a civil conflict marked by intense violence and severe human rights abuses. An important objective of truth and reconciliation commissions involves instituting measures to address serious human rights abuses that have occurred as a result of discrimination, ethnocentrism and racism. In recent years, rather than solely utilizing traditional methods of conflict resolution and criminal prosecution, transitional governments have established truth and reconciliation commissions as part of efforts to foster psychological, social and political healing. </p><p>The primary objective of this research project is to determine why there has been a proliferation of truth and reconciliation commissions around the world in recent decades, and assess whether the perceived effectiveness of these commissions is real and substantial. In this work, using a multi-method approach that involves quantitative and qualitative analysis, I consider the institutional design and structural composition of truth and reconciliation commissions, as well as the roles that these commissions play in the democratic transformation of nations with a history of civil conflict and human rights violations. </p><p>In addition to a focus on institutional design of truth and reconciliation commissions, I use a group identity framework that is grounded in social identity theory to examine the historical background and sociopolitical context in which truth commissions have been adopted in countries around the world. This group identity framework serves as an invaluable lens through which questions related to truth and reconciliation commissions and other transitional justice mechanisms can be explored. I also present a unique theoretical framework, the reconciliatory democratization paradigm, that is especially useful for examining the complex interactions between the various political elements that directly affect the processes of democratic consolidation and reconciliation in countries in which truth and reconciliation commissions have been established. Finally, I tackle the question of whether successor regimes that institute truth and reconciliation commissions can effectively address the human rights violations that occurred in the past, and prevent the recurrence of these abuses.</p> / Dissertation
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Sea-Level Rise and Climate Justice for Native Americans and Indigenous Peoples: An Analysis of the United States' Response and ResponsibilitiesSwiersz, Sarah 01 January 2020 (has links)
Sea-level rise and inland flooding driven by climate change threaten the health, economic development, and social stability of Native American Tribes and Indigenous Nations. Further, loss of traditional lands threatens the cultural practices and ties to heritage that provide ontological grounding for many Indigenous Peoples. While the Federal Trust Doctrine implies a responsibility for federal policy to aid Tribes by compensating them for impacts of sea-level rise, there is no legislation securing compensation for Indigenous Nations not recognized as Tribes. Due to the incommensurable nature of the damage to Native American and Indigenous communities who lose their lands to sea-level rise, any processes of compensation must transcend relocation measures and monetary transactions. Further, to combat aid programming that perpetuates the social, legal, and cultural disenfranchisement of Native Americans and Indigenous Peoples, legislation for compensation must endorse and empower Tribes’ and Nations’ autonomy by meaningfully including their insights. This study records the perspectives of members of the Seminole and Miccosukee Tribes and Gullah/Geechee Nation on climate change in the Southeastern U.S., specifically, sea-level rise washing out ancestral lands. This study’s ultimate purpose is to understand how Tribe and Nation members perceive the response and responsibility of the U.S. government in these situations. This study also presents a legal/political analysis of climate justice in these contexts, an exploration of Truth and Reconciliation Commissions as a mechanism for climate justice, and culminates in a policy proposal regarding climate justice for Native Americans and Indigenous Peoples.
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Achieving sustainable peace in post conflict societies : an evaluation of South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation CommissionRage, Anne-Britt 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (Political Science))--University of Stellenbosch, 2010. / Bibliography / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This thesis explores whether sustainable peace can be achieved in post-conflict
societies using the transitional justice approach. In particular, the truth commission
is investigated as a mechanism of transitional justice. The South African Truth and
Reconciliation Commission (TRC) was selected as a case study to investigate the
relationship between sustainable peace and transitional justice. This thesis
analyses whether the TRC Commission followed its mandate, and whether there
are any specific definitions, conclusions or recommendations that the TRC through
its Final Report undertakes in order to fulfill a specific part of the mandate, namely
“to ensure that there would be no repetition of the past” (TRC vol. 5, chap. 8,
paragraph 14). This is done through a textual analysis of the Final Report of the
South African TRC, where inherent weaknesses of the Final Report in its aim of
achieving sustainable peace are read critically and deconstructively. It is further
analysed through linking the issue of sustainable peace to the field of transitional
justice and the study of political development on how future TRCs can deal with
the issue of sustainable peace.
This thesis comes to the conclusion that the South African TRC failed to contribute
to a significant analysis of how to prevent the repetition of the past. It is argued
that this is based on a lack of a coherent theoretical framework, as the Final
Report mixes two different truth finding mechanisms: micro-truth finding and
macro-truth finding, together with the just war theory. By analysing the TRC’s
theoretical framework through textual analysis, it becomes clear that micro- and
macro-truth finding is difficult to combine in one report, and that in the South
African case the micro-truth finding part is prioritised. However, the macro-truth
finding mechanism would have provided a more in depth analysis towards
sustainable peace – which in this thesis is read as Galtung’s positive peace and
Lederach’s structural peace – and is a necessary prerequisite in order to achieve
sustainable peace. Also the use of a traditional reading of the just war theoryThis thesis explores whether sustainable peace can be achieved in post-conflict
societies using the transitional justice approach. In particular, the truth commission
is investigated as a mechanism of transitional justice. The South African Truth and
Reconciliation Commission (TRC) was selected as a case study to investigate the
relationship between sustainable peace and transitional justice. This thesis
analyses whether the TRC Commission followed its mandate, and whether there
are any specific definitions, conclusions or recommendations that the TRC through
its Final Report undertakes in order to fulfill a specific part of the mandate, namely
“to ensure that there would be no repetition of the past” (TRC vol. 5, chap. 8,
paragraph 14). This is done through a textual analysis of the Final Report of the
South African TRC, where inherent weaknesses of the Final Report in its aim of
achieving sustainable peace are read critically and deconstructively. It is further
analysed through linking the issue of sustainable peace to the field of transitional
justice and the study of political development on how future TRCs can deal with
the issue of sustainable peace.
This thesis comes to the conclusion that the South African TRC failed to contribute
to a significant analysis of how to prevent the repetition of the past. It is argued
that this is based on a lack of a coherent theoretical framework, as the Final
Report mixes two different truth finding mechanisms: micro-truth finding and
macro-truth finding, together with the just war theory. By analysing the TRC’s
theoretical framework through textual analysis, it becomes clear that micro- and
macro-truth finding is difficult to combine in one report, and that in the South
African case the micro-truth finding part is prioritised. However, the macro-truth
finding mechanism would have provided a more in depth analysis towards
sustainable peace – which in this thesis is read as Galtung’s positive peace and
Lederach’s structural peace – and is a necessary prerequisite in order to achieve
sustainable peace. Also the use of a traditional reading of the just war theoryThis thesis explores whether sustainable peace can be achieved in post-conflict
societies using the transitional justice approach. In particular, the truth commission
is investigated as a mechanism of transitional justice. The South African Truth and
Reconciliation Commission (TRC) was selected as a case study to investigate the
relationship between sustainable peace and transitional justice. This thesis
analyses whether the TRC Commission followed its mandate, and whether there
are any specific definitions, conclusions or recommendations that the TRC through
its Final Report undertakes in order to fulfill a specific part of the mandate, namely
“to ensure that there would be no repetition of the past” (TRC vol. 5, chap. 8,
paragraph 14). This is done through a textual analysis of the Final Report of the
South African TRC, where inherent weaknesses of the Final Report in its aim of
achieving sustainable peace are read critically and deconstructively. It is further
analysed through linking the issue of sustainable peace to the field of transitional
justice and the study of political development on how future TRCs can deal with
the issue of sustainable peace.
This thesis comes to the conclusion that the South African TRC failed to contribute
to a significant analysis of how to prevent the repetition of the past. It is argued
that this is based on a lack of a coherent theoretical framework, as the Final
Report mixes two different truth finding mechanisms: micro-truth finding and
macro-truth finding, together with the just war theory. By analysing the TRC’s
theoretical framework through textual analysis, it becomes clear that micro- and
macro-truth finding is difficult to combine in one report, and that in the South
African case the micro-truth finding part is prioritised. However, the macro-truth
finding mechanism would have provided a more in depth analysis towards
sustainable peace – which in this thesis is read as Galtung’s positive peace and
Lederach’s structural peace – and is a necessary prerequisite in order to achieve
sustainable peace. Also the use of a traditional reading of the just war theory contributes to an individualisation of the truth finding process and does not
sufficiently support the macro-truths. Finally, by deconstructing the term never
again it is shown that this approach should not be used in the TRCs or in the wider
field of transitional justice
v / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie tesis ondersoek of volhoubare vrede in postkonfliksamelewings met
behulp van die oorgangsgeregtigheidsbenadering bereik kan word. Meer bepaald
word die soeklig gewerp op die waarheidskommissie as meganisme van
oorgangsgeregtigheid. Die Suid-Afrikaanse Waarheids-en-Versoeningskommissie
(WVK) dien as gevallestudie om die verwantskap tussen volhoubare vrede en
oorgangsgeregtigheid te bestudeer. Die tesis probeer vasstel of die WVK sy
mandaat uitgevoer het, en of die Kommissie se finale verslag enige bepaalde
omskrywings, gevolgtrekkings of aanbevelings bevat “om te verseker dat die
verlede hom nie herhaal nie” (paragraaf 14, hoofstuk 8, volume 5 van die WVKverslag).
Dít vind plaas deur middel van ! tekstuele ontleding van die finale WVKverslag
wat die inherente swakpunte van dié dokument in sy strewe na volhoubare
vrede krities en dekonstruktief benader. Die verslag word voorts ontleed deur die
kwessie van volhoubare vrede te verbind met die gebied van oorgangsgeregtigheid
sowel as ontwikkelingstudies oor hoe toekomstige WVK’s die
kwessie van volhoubare vrede kan hanteer.
Die tesis kom tot die gevolgtrekking dat die Suid-Afrikaanse WVK nie ! bydrae
gelewer het tot ! sinvolle ontleding van presies hoe om ! herhaling van die
verlede te voorkom nie. Daar word aangevoer dat dít te wyte is aan die gebrek
aan ! samehangende teoretiese raamwerk, aangesien die finale verslag twee
verskillende waarheidsoekende meganismes vermeng – die mikrowaarheidsoeke
en die makrowaarheidsoeke – en ook van die geregverdigde-oorlog-teorie gebruik
maak. Deur die tekstuele ontleding van die teoretiese raamwerk van die WVKverslag
word dit duidelik dat ! mikro- en makrowaarheidsoeke moeilik in een
verslag te kombineer is, en dat, in die Suid-Afrikaanse geval, die mikrowaarheidsoeke
voorkeur geniet. Tog sou die makrowaarheidsoeke ! grondiger
ontleding bied vir die suksesvolle verwesenliking van volhoubare vrede, wat in
hierdie tesis as Galtung se ‘positiewe vrede’ en Lederach se ‘strukturele vrede’
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verstaan word. Trouens, die makrowaarheidsoeke is ! voorvereiste om
volhoubare vrede te bereik. ! Tradisionele lesing van die geregverdigde-oorlogteorie
dra ook by tot ! individualisering van die waarheidsoekende proses, en bied
nie voldoende ondersteuning vir die makrowaarhede nie. Laastens word daar deur
die dekonstruksie van die uitdrukking nooit weer nie getoon dat hierdie benadering
nie in WVK’s of op die groter gebied van oorgangsgeregtigheid tuishoort nie.
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La construction du "droit à la vérité" en droit international: une ressource ambivalente à la croisée de plusieurs mobilisations / Construction of the "right to truth" in international law: an ambivalent tool at the crossroads of several MobilizationsNaftali, Patricia 08 February 2013 (has links)
En l’espace d’une décennie, le concept de « droit à la vérité » est parvenu à s’imposer dans le paysage des institutions et juridictions de protection des droits de l’homme. Il a été initialement reconnu dans le cadre des disparitions forcées par la Cour interaméricaine des droits de l’homme (2000), la Chambre des droits de l’homme de Bosnie-Herzégovine (2003) et dans la Convention internationale contre les disparitions forcées (2006), pour s’étendre aux violations graves du droit international humanitaire et des droits de l’homme (Haut-Commissariat des droits de l’homme aux Nations Unies, 2006; Conseil des droits de l’homme, 2008; Cour pénale internationale, 2010). En plein essor, ce droit est actuellement au cœur de vives discussions à la Cour européenne des droits de l’homme, comme l’attestent les opinions séparées des juges dans l’affaire El-Masri c. Macédoine à propos de la restitution extraordinaire d’un citoyen allemand dans le cadre de la « lutte contre le terrorisme » menée par les États-Unis avec la complicité d’États européens (Grande chambre, arrêt du 13 décembre 2012). <p><p>Comment une notion aussi floue a-t-elle pu être consacrée si rapidement auprès de ces institutions, alors qu’elle n’est reprise dans aucun catalogue des droits fondamentaux ?Quelle est la portée de ce nouvel objet en droit international, et quels en sont les usages ?Mis à part son appellation, le « droit à la vérité » aurait-il réellement un contenu propre qui se distinguerait du catalogue des droits existants ?Sa reconnaissance offre-t-elle une illustration de la « rhétorique des droits » ou traduit-elle la cristallisation d’un nouveau droit justiciable?<p> <p>Alors même que le « droit à la vérité » est aujourd’hui convoqué de manière croissante par la communauté internationale pour légitimer la mise en place de nouvelles politiques de pacification internationales, à l’instar des « commission de vérité et de réconciliation » préconisées dans des sociétés affectées par des crimes d’ampleur massive (rapports du Secrétariat général et du Haut-Commissariat aux droits de l’homme des Nations Unies, 2004, et de la Banque mondiale, 2011), cet objet d’étude demeure largement inexploré. Palliant cette lacune, ma thèse consiste en une reconstitution généalogique du « droit à la vérité » dans une perspective chronologique, des luttes sociales concrètes pour sa reconnaissance à ses développements juridiques contemporains, afin de déterminer les enjeux sociaux, politiques et juridiques de sa reconnaissance. <p><p>À travers une méthode interdisciplinaire qui articule l’approche critique du droit à la sociologie politique du droit, mes recherches apportent ainsi des connaissances originales sur deux plans :sur le plan juridique, d’une part, il s’agit de la première étude exhaustive des textes et décisions juridiques sur le « droit à la vérité » qui analyse de manière systématique sa nature, ses bénéficiaires, son contenu et ses contours en droit international; sur le plan de la sociologie du droit, d’autre part, elle offre une cartographie inédite des mobilisations sociales et professionnelles du « droit à la vérité » et propose une analyse des motivations qui les animent, susceptible d’enrichir les débats en sociologie du droit et de la justice sur la création et la diffusion empirique de nouvelles normes en droit international. <p><p>L’hypothèse de travail mise à l’épreuve tout au long de l’étude est la suivante :la reconnaissance d’un « droit à la vérité », notion à contenu variable par excellence, permettrait à une multitude d’entrepreneurs de normes de défendre, derrière la formalisation de ce droit, d’autres causes controversées en droit international. La thèse montre ainsi comment les mobilisations du « droit à la vérité » tentent d’orienter dans des sens particuliers certains débats qui demeurent ouverts en droit international et qui sont liés à des enjeux de justice contemporains :les victimes d’atrocités ont-elles un droit à la punition des responsables ?Les amnisties sont-elles licites en droit international, et le cas échéant, à quelles conditions ?Peut-on restreindre le privilège du secret d’État et contraindre les autorités à communiquer des informations aux victimes lorsqu’elles sont soupçonnées de couvrir des crimes internationaux ?Quelle est l’étendue et la nature de l’obligation des États d’enquêter et de poursuivre les auteurs de crimes de masse ?En cas de circonstances exceptionnelles, comme la menace d’un coup d’État ou l’insuffisance de ressources financières, les gouvernements ont-ils une marge de discrétion sur ces questions ?Emblème des dilemmes de la justice transitionnelle, le « droit à la vérité » est ainsi revendiqué dans des directions opposées.<p> <p>En particulier, la thèse révèle la diversité irréductible des mobilisations du « droit à la vérité » en explorant la polysémie de ses usages, les jeux de compétition entre ses promoteurs et les tensions qui jalonnent sa formalisation en droit international. Cette analyse empirique permet de comprendre pourquoi ce droit fonde aujourd’hui des politiques contradictoires, à savoir tant des politiques de répression des violations graves des droits de l’homme, axées sur la condamnation pénale des responsables, que des politiques mémorielles axées sur la « réconciliation » des sociétés à travers des amnisties au bénéfice des auteurs de crimes, ainsi que des mesures de réparation matérielles et symboliques au bénéfice des victimes. Droit à une vérité judiciaire des victimes, et droit à une vérité « historique » et collective des peuples sur les causes de conflits passés coexistent ainsi au sein du même droit pour justifier un déploiement de la justice pénale international(isé)e ou à l’inverse, pour la paralyser au nom d’impératifs de démocratisation et de concorde civile. <p><p>Ma thèse démontre ainsi l’ambivalence du « droit à la vérité », qui agit tantôt comme ressource, et tantôt comme contrainte pour ses promoteurs :au final, il n’offre qu’une ressource limitée à ses promoteurs en raison de la compétition qui continue à se jouer au sujet de sa définition, sa nature et ses titulaires. <p> / Doctorat en Sciences juridiques / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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Empowering Peace: The Relationship Between Women's Participation in Peace Negotiations and Gender-Inclusive Truth and Reconciliation CommissionsRonderos, Katherine January 2024 (has links)
This thesis examines how women's participation in peace negotiations impacts the gender inclusivity of Truth and Reconciliation Commissions (TRCs) in Côte d'Ivoire, Liberia, and Colombia. It explores whether higher degrees of women's involvement led to more gender-inclusive TRCs, hypothesising that increased participation results in better integration of gender considerations. Using secondary data and primary interviews from Colombia, the study highlights political pressure as a key causal mechanism. Findings reveal that in Côte d'Ivoire, significant grassroots activism by women without formal negotiation roles led to moderate gender inclusivity in the TRC. In Liberia, limited formal participation in peace negotiations, combined with strong grassroots advocacy and post-conflict decision-making roles for women, resulted in a highly gender-inclusive TRC. In Colombia, women's formal involvement in peace negotiations, alongside continuous advocacy by women’s organisations, led to over 100 gender-specific provisions in the peace agreement, fostering a robust gender-inclusive TRC. These results partially support the hypothesis, showing that higher women's participation generally leads to more gender-inclusive TRCs. The research underscores the importance of institutionalising gender perspectives, leveraging political pressure, and ensuring international support to achieve inclusive and sustainable peace processes. It offers practical insights for enhancing gender inclusivity in transitional justice mechanisms like TRCs.
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Francophonie et justice : contribution de l'organisation internationale de la francophonie à la construction de l'état de droit / Francophonie and justice : International Organization of La Francophonie contribution to the construction of the rule of law.Kassi, Brou Olivier Saint-Omer 16 December 2015 (has links)
La justice est un attribut fondamental de l’Etat moderne. Elle assure, dans unesociété démocratique, la sauvegarde de l’édifice normatif ainsi que la protection des droitset libertés. Une justice indépendante et efficace est un symbole de l’Etat de droit. Ellerévèle la réalité de la séparation des pouvoirs et consacre le règne du droit. Maisl’efficacité de tout appareil judiciaire dépend de la nature et de l’ampleur des moyens dontil dispose. Or, dans nombre d’Etats francophones, le système judiciaire connaît denombreuses faiblesses, liées tantôt aux avatars des processus de stabilisationdémocratique, tantôt aux situations plus fragiles de sortie de crise. La question durenforcement des capacités des institutions judiciaires se trouve ainsi posée. Et c’est surcette base que l’Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie (OIF) a investi, depuisune trentaine d’années, le champ de la coopération juridique et judiciaire. Ayant inscrit lapromotion de la démocratie au coeur de son action politique, la Francophonie a pris desengagements forts et développé, en s’appuyant sur ses réseaux institutionnels, desprogrammes destinés à accompagner ses Etats membres dans le renforcement descapacités de leurs systèmes de justice. Cet engagement est perceptible dans le corpusnormatif de l’Organisation. Il marque la ferme volonté des Etats francophones d’ancrerleurs relations dans un cadre de coopération, attaché à la protection des droitsfondamentaux et à la régulation des pouvoirs majoritaires. La justice est donc désormaisérigée en priorité dans le champ des préoccupations francophones. Elle y est saisie tantaux niveaux national et international que dans sa dimension transitionnelle. / Justice is a fundamental attribute of modern States. In a democratic society, itguarantees the safeguard of the standard-setting framework as well as the protection ofrights. An independent and effective justice is a symbol of the rule of law. It illustrates theseparation of powers and establishes the primacy of law. But the efficiency of any judicialsystem depends on the nature and the extent of the resources at its disposal. Yet, inmany Francophone countries, the judicial system faces many weaknesses, sometimesrelated to the avatars of democratic stabilisation processes, sometimes to more fragilepost-crisis situations. So the question of the capacity development of the judicialinstitutions arises. For thirty years, the International Organization of La Francophonie(OIF) has entered the legal and judicial cooperation field on this basis. By including thepromotion of democracy at the heart of its political action, the OIF has indeed made strongcommitments and developed programs aimed at accompanying its member States in thecapacity development of their justice systems, thanks to its institutional networks. Thiscommitment can be seen in several statements of the Organization. It demonstrates thewill of the Francophone States to anchor their relationships in a cooperation framework,dedicated to the protection of fundamental rights and the regulation of majorities’ powers.Today, justice is consequently established as a priority in Francophone concerns. It isentered in both national and international level and in its transitional dimension
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