IRRC No. 862

Truth and reconciliation commissions

13 articles

IRRC No. 862 Truth and reconciliation commissions

13 articles

Penal prosecution was seen as antagonistic to reconciliation strategies, but the "justice versus peace" problem is now seen as a simplification of the debate. Reconciliation is increasingly understood as an umbrella-term for an overall process which includes the search for truth, justice and forgiveness. This issue concentrates on the problems raised by Truth and Reconciliation Commissions and provides an overview of the ones established, their successes and their failures.

Table of contents

article IRRC No. 862

Editorial: Truth and reconciliation commissions

article IRRC No. 862

Interview with Salomón Lerner

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The right to the truth in international law: fact or fiction?

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Provoking the dragon on the patio - Matters of transitional justice: penal repression vs. amnesties

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Truth commissions: a schematic overview

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Dealing with the past and transitional justice: building peace through acccountability

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Reflections on international humanitarian law and transitional justice: lessons to be learnt from the Latin American experience

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The missing and transitional justice: the right to know and the fight against impunity

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Cooperation between truth commissions and the International Committee of the Red Cross

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The principles of universal jurisdiction and complementarity: how do the two principles intermesh?

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The Iraqi High Criminal Court: controversy and contributions

article IRRC No. 862

Future themes for the International Review of the Red Cross: September 2006 - September 2007

article IRRC No. 862

Books and articles (Summer 2006)