Transitional Justice

Gender and the Politics of Justice in the Northern Ireland Peace Process: Considering Róisín McAliskey

Citation:

Whitaker, Robin. 2008. “Gender and the Politics of Justice in the Northern Ireland Peace Process: Considering Róisín McAliskey.” Identities: Global Studies in Culture and Power 15 (1): 1–30.

Author: Robin Whitaker

Abstract:

This essay explores reactions to the 1996-1997 incarceration of Róisín McAliskey, a young Irish republican, pregnant at the time of her arrest. The case revealed tensions and contradictions in the politics of gender, national identity, and reconciliation at a tentative stage in the Northern Ireland peace process. Special attention is given to the negotiation of the case by the politically diverse Northern Ireland Women's Coalition and other activists who worked to forge broad-based support campaigns. Along with reactions to them, these efforts were diagnostic of the challenges of developing new politics during this transitional period. These included prospects for new gender-based alliances as well as the potential and the limitations of human rights and political recognition to contribute to projects of reconciliation. For some activist women, the McAliskey case was unsettling to their own sense of political identity, a disruption that may be understood as symptomatic of the intersubjective quality of recognition. It suggests that, although demands for recognition are often most salient in ethnic or nationalist "conflict zones," the dilemmas attached to extending recognition may be especially acute in just such contexts, where both political subjectivity and physical safety have often hinged on avoiding ambiguity. Similarly, human rights are frequently presented as vehicles for peacemaking. When the state's legitimacy is the focus of conflict, however, demands for human rights often appear as attacks on the state and, by implication, those who identify with it.

Topics: Armed Conflict, Gender, Women, Justice, Transitional Justice, Peace Processes, Rights, Human Rights Regions: Europe, Western Europe Countries: United Kingdom

Year: 2008

Does Feminism Need a Theory of Transitional Justice? An Introductory Essay

Citation:

Bell, Christine, and Catherine O’Rourke. 2007. “Does Feminism Need a Theory of Transitional Justice? An Introductory Essay.” The International Journal of Transitional Justice 1: 23–44. 

Authors: Catherine O’Rourke, Christine Bell

Abstract:

This essay surveys feminist scholarship and praxis on transitional justice, examining its ongoing contribution to the conceptualization and design of transitional justice mechanisms. We examine some of the gender implications of a specifically ‘transitional’ theory of justice. The essay concludes by proposing that feminist theory should focus on how transitional justice debates help or hinder broader projects of securing material gains for women through transition, rather than trying to fit a feminist notion of justice within transitional justice frameworks.

Topics: Feminisms, Gender, Justice, Transitional Justice

Year: 2007

The Gender of Transitional Justice: Law, Sexual Violence and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia

Citation:

Campbell, Kirsten. 2007. “The Gender of Transitional Justice: Law, Sexual Violence and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia.” International Journal of Transitional Justice 1 (3): 411–32. doi:10.1093/ijtj/ijm033.

Author: Kirsten Campbell

Abstract:

Recent efforts to develop and implement progressive models of transitional justice have been significantly influenced by major developments in the law concerning sexual violence in armed conflict. In particular, the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia has pioneered accountability for sexual violence against women in armed conflict. This article takes the ICTY as a case study of how gender can structure the accountability mechanisms of transitional justice. The article analyses how legal norms and practices instantiate and reiterate, rather than transform, existing hierarchical gender relations. It considers the existing models of sexual violence as a criminal harm under international law, and then examines gendered patterns of legal practice in ICTY prosecutions. To address this engendering of transitional justice, the article produces a new model of the harm of sexual violence in conflict, suggests the development of a new international offence of sexual violence and generates different strategies for international prosecutions of sexual violence.

Topics: Gender, Justice, International Tribunals & Special Courts, Transitional Justice, Sexual Violence Regions: Europe, Balkans Countries: Yugoslavia (former)

Year: 2007

Paths to Transitional Justice for Afghan Women

Citation:

Grenfell, Laura. 2004. “Paths to Transitional Justice for Afghan Women.” Nordic Journal of International Law 73 (4): 505–34.

Author: Laura Grenfell

Topics: Gender, Women, Gender-Based Violence, Justice, Impunity, Reparations, Transitional Justice Regions: Asia, South Asia Countries: Afghanistan

Year: 2004

Liberia Is Not Just a Man Thing: Transitional Justice Lessons for Women, Peace and Security

Citation:

Campbell-Nelson, Karen. 2008. Liberia Is Not Just a Man Thing: Transitional Justice Lessons for Women, Peace and Security. London: International Center for Transitional Justice.

Author: Karen Campbell-Nelson

Topics: Gender, Women, Men, Justice, Transitional Justice, Peacebuilding, Security Regions: Africa, West Africa Countries: Liberia

Year: 2008

Security Sector Reform: Re-imagining Its Transformative Potential

Citation:

Ero, Comfort. 2011. “Security Sector Reform: Re-imagining Its Transformative Potential.” In Women and Security Governance in Africa, edited by 'Funmi Olonisakin and Awino Okech, 31–48. Nairobi: Pambazuka Press.

Author: Comfort Ero

Topics: Gender, Governance, Justice, Transitional Justice, Post-Conflict, Post-Conflict Reconstruction, Rights, Women's Rights, Security, Security Sector Reform Regions: Africa

Year: 2011

The Special Court for Sierra Leone’s Consideration of Gender-based Violence: Contributing to Transitional Justice?

Citation:

Oosterveld, Valerie. 2009. “The Special Court for Sierra Leone’s Consideration of Gender-based Violence: Contributing to Transitional Justice?” Human Rights Review 10 (1): 73–98. doi: 10.1007/s12142-008-0098-7.

Author: Valeria Oosterveld

Abstract:

Serious gender-based crimes were committed against women and girls during Sierra Leone’s decade-long armed conflict. This article examines how the Special Court for Sierra Leone has approached these crimes in its first four judgments. The June 20, 2007 trial judgment in the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council case assists international criminal law’s limited understanding of the crime against humanity of forced marriage, but also collapses evidence of that crime into the war crime of outrages upon personal dignity. The February 22, 2008 appeals judgment attempts to correct this misstep. In contrast, the August 2, 2007 trial judgment in the Civil Defence Forces case is virtually silent on crimes committed against women and girls, although the May 28, 2008 appeals judgment attempts to partially redress this silence. This article concludes that the four judgments, considered together, raise the specter that the Special Court could potentially fail to make a significant progressive contribution to gender-sensitive transitional justice.

Topics: Gender, Women, Girls, Gender-Based Violence, International Law, International Criminal Law, Justice, Crimes against Humanity, International Tribunals & Special Courts, Transitional Justice, Post-Conflict Regions: Africa, West Africa Countries: Sierra Leone

Year: 2009

Capturing Women's Experiences of Conflict: Transitional Justice in Sierra Leone

Citation:

Muddell, Kelli. 2007. “Capturing Women’s Experiences of Conflict: Transitional Justice in Sierra Leone.” Michigan State Journal of International Law 15 (1): 1–85.

Author: Kelli Muddell

Topics: Armed Conflict, Gender, Women, Justice, Transitional Justice Regions: Africa, West Africa Countries: Sierra Leone

Year: 2007

Gendered Transitional Justice and the Non-State Actor

Citation:

Ní Aoláin, Fionnuala, and Catherine O’Rourke. 2010. “Gendered Transitional Justice and the Non-State Actor.” In Contested Transitions: Dilemmas of Transitional Justice in Colombia and Comparative Experience, edited by M. Reed and A. Lyons, 115-43. Bogota: International Center for Transitional Justice.

Authors: Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, Catherine O’Rourke

Abstract:

This essay starts from the premise that feminist contributions to shaping the field and scope of transitional justice have had a significant effect on broadening and redefining the field. Intervention designed to activate international accountability and to deepen domestic criminalization of sexual violence have been a priority and have had some success. In addition, exploration of the relationship between truth-telling and gender, amnesty and gender, as well as the relationship between gender and peacemaking, were also high on the feminist agenda. More recently, efforts to engender reparations programmes have brought light and heat to a range of harms experienced by women. There is increasing feminist attention to the category of socioeconomic harms, and their disproportionate impact on women. However, we argue that by contrast to feminist efforts to broaden transitional justice's frame, feminist interventions have assumed a remarkably narrow set of actors and institutions of responsibility. The legal devices common to transitional justice landscape - amnesty, truth recovery, international criminal justice, reconstruction, rule of law reform, security sector reform, and reparations - posit the state as the site and conduit of transition. In this typology, transitional justice is a process by which the state is rendered coherent and legitimate. Throughout, feminist interventions in the field of transitional justice tend to assume the state. By this we mean that the state is seen as the locus for reform, and the entity that is most capable of and necessary to delivering transformation for women. As a result, advocacy for tougher measures of individual criminal accountability for sexual violence, gender analysis in truth commissions, policy prescriptions for reparations programmes, and advocacy for prioritizing an end to gender harms in security sector reform, are all interventions that assume the necessity of the state and its related institutional components. We argue that this singular focus on the state can obscure a range of other important actors relevant to securing transition and may overestimate the extent to which the state is capable of delivering on feminist expectations. To advance our analysis we focus on the Colombian context, assessing in particular the extent to which gendered violence committed by non-state actors can be satisfactorily be accommodated within current state oriented framework. We offer some alternatives to the state-only focus with a particular focus on the contribution of international humanitarian law for the accountability of violations committed by non-state actors.

Topics: Gender, Women, Justice, Transitional Justice, Military Forces & Armed Groups, Non-State Armed Groups Regions: Americas, South America Countries: Colombia

Year: 2010

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