Title of article :
Transitional Justice and the Rule of Law: The Perfect Couple or Awkward Bedfellows?
Author/Authors :
McAuliffe، Padraig نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Abstract :
The dominant scholarly assumptions are that transitional justice is a pre-condition
for establishing a rule of law-based society after conflict or repression, and that
transitional justice and the rule of law are mutually-reinforcing phenomena.
Though the imperfect conditions of transition invariably give rise to difficult dilemmas
over justice with imperfect solutions, literature in the field has
downplayed or ignored the long-term impact on the administration of justice in
the transitional state of the tendency of transitional responses to past human
rights abuses to readily depart from the core values we associate with the rule of
law. As noted in Teitel’s study of the rule of law’s relationship to transitional justice,
this tendency is manifest where criminal accountability is suspended so as not
to imperil the transition or where due process is circumvented in the idealistic and
over-zealous pursuit of idealized transitional dividends through trial, truth com-mission and reparation. As transitional justice scholarship moves from moralphilosophical
and jurisprudential preoccupations to greater empirical and interdisciplinary
analysis, the sweeping normative assumptions of the past are increasingly
being questioned. The article argues that though such acts or omissions may be
excused by the exigencies of transition and contribute to the development of the
conditions where the rule of law can prosper, liberalizing societies are better
served by understanding these deviations from what we understand as full legality
as deviations and not as manifestations of a fluid and contingent transitional rule
of law.
Journal title :
Hague Journal on the Rule of Law
Journal title :
Hague Journal on the Rule of Law