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Costs Of Justice How New Leaders Respond To Previous Rights Abuses 1st Edition Brian K Grodsky

  • SKU: BELL-51430464
Costs Of Justice How New Leaders Respond To Previous Rights Abuses 1st Edition Brian K Grodsky
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Costs Of Justice How New Leaders Respond To Previous Rights Abuses 1st Edition Brian K Grodsky instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Notre Dame Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.78 MB
Pages: 367
Author: Brian K. Grodsky
ISBN: 9780268080648, 026808064X
Language: English
Year: 2011
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Costs Of Justice How New Leaders Respond To Previous Rights Abuses 1st Edition Brian K Grodsky by Brian K. Grodsky 9780268080648, 026808064X instant download after payment.

In The Costs of Justice, Brian K. Grodsky provides qualitative analyses of how transitional justice processes have evolved in diverse ways in postcommunist Poland, Croatia, Serbia, and Uzbekistan, by examining the decision-making processes and goals of those actors who contributed to key transitional justice policy decisions. Grodsky draws on extensive interviews with key political figures, human rights leaders, and representatives of various international, state, and nongovernmental bodies, as well as detailed analysis of international and local news reports, to offer a systematic and qualitatively compelling account of transitional justice from the perspective of activists who, at the end of a previous regime, were suddenly transformed from downtrodden victim to empowered judge. Grodsky challenges the argument that transitional justice in post-repressive states is largely a function of the relative power of new versus old elites. He maintains that a new regime's transitional justice policy is closely linked to its capacity to provide goods and services expected by constituents, not to political power struggles. In introducing this goods variable, so common to broad political analysis but largely overlooked in the transitional justice debate, Grodsky argues that we must revise our understanding of transitional justice. It is not an exceptional issue; it is but one of many political decisions faced by leaders in a transition state.

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