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Focusing on political parties, this article highlights divergent conceptualizations
of key elements of transitional justice that are part of the current contestation
of the dealing-with-the-past process in Burundi. Speaking to the emerging critical
literature on transitional justice, this article attempts to look beyond claims that
there is a lack of political will to comply with a certain global transitional justice
paradigm. In this article, transitional justice is conceived of as a political process
of negotiated values and power relations that attempts to constitute the future based
on lessons from the past. This paper argues that political parties in Burundi use
transitional justice not only as a strategy to protect partisan interests or target
political opponents, but also as an instrument to promote their political struggles
in the course of moulding a new, post-conflict society and state.
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(Re)making the social world: the politics of transitional justice in Burundi
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Zeitschriftenartikel
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journal_article
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GESIS-SSOAR
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In: Africa Spectrum, 48, 2013, 1, 3-24
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urn:nbn:de:gbv:18-4-5977
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