Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Acknowledgements
- CONTENTS
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: Contextualising and Understanding the Global Role, Impact and Legacy of Truth Commissions
- Is Anyone Listening? A Review of the Research on Attitudes Towards Truth Commissions
- Assessing the Long-Term Impact and Legacy of Truth Commissions
- The Global Textual Legacies of Truth Commissions: Narratives on Sexual Violence in the Reports of Sierra Leone, Liberia, Kenya and Beyond
- The Implementation Record of Truth Commissions’ Recommendations in Latin America
- In the Aftermath of Truth: Implementing Truth Commissions’ Recommendations on Reparations – Following Through for Victims
- Truth Commissions and Social Justice: ‘Wishful Thinking or Not Very Thoughtful Wishing’?
- Transitioning Toward Dignity
- Towards an Understanding of How Truth Commissions Can Use Their Amnesty Powers to Enhance Their Impact and Legacy
- Truth Commissions in Non-Transitional Contexts: Implications for Their Impact and Legacy
- Surrogacy and Resistance: Evolving Patterns in Unofficial Truth Commissions and Truth Projects
- Index
Truth Commissions in Non-Transitional Contexts: Implications for Their Impact and Legacy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 June 2019
- Frontmatter
- Acknowledgements
- CONTENTS
- List of Contributors
- Introduction: Contextualising and Understanding the Global Role, Impact and Legacy of Truth Commissions
- Is Anyone Listening? A Review of the Research on Attitudes Towards Truth Commissions
- Assessing the Long-Term Impact and Legacy of Truth Commissions
- The Global Textual Legacies of Truth Commissions: Narratives on Sexual Violence in the Reports of Sierra Leone, Liberia, Kenya and Beyond
- The Implementation Record of Truth Commissions’ Recommendations in Latin America
- In the Aftermath of Truth: Implementing Truth Commissions’ Recommendations on Reparations – Following Through for Victims
- Truth Commissions and Social Justice: ‘Wishful Thinking or Not Very Thoughtful Wishing’?
- Transitioning Toward Dignity
- Towards an Understanding of How Truth Commissions Can Use Their Amnesty Powers to Enhance Their Impact and Legacy
- Truth Commissions in Non-Transitional Contexts: Implications for Their Impact and Legacy
- Surrogacy and Resistance: Evolving Patterns in Unofficial Truth Commissions and Truth Projects
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
In the 21st century, it is commonly accepted that states have a legal and normative obligation to provide the truth about histories of violence and repression; truth commissions are Often suggested as a means of fulfilling this obligation. Truth commissions came to prominence as a result of their use as part of transitions from military rule to democracy in Latin America and from apartheid to inclusive democracy in South Africa. The global attention paid to the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), in particular, popularised this form of transitional justice. The truth commission model gained favour at least in part because it appealed to a variety of audiences. For perpetrators and those who feared that criminal accountability would be destabilising, truth commissions were less threatening. For many victims and activists, by contrast, truth commissions represented some measure of justice. As such, truth commissions seemed to provide a useful compromise, addressing past abuses in some fashion during attempted democratic transitions. In fact, in the wake of the South African TRC, truth commissions came to be seen by many as valuable in their own right, in that they could provide a valuable contribution to social and psychological repair, as well as the (re)construction of more democratic political institutions after political transitions.
As the truth commission model gained greater visibility and more adherents, it has also been increasingly utilised in a variety of other contexts. First, truth commissions have been employed in war-to-peace transitions. Even further, the model has sometimes been applied to contexts where little to no real political change has occurred at all. This chapter distinguishes three non-transitional contexts in which truth commissions have been employed with growing frequency. First, truth commissions are sometimes created by governments after they have decisively defeated an armed threat. Second, firmly entrenched authoritarian regimes have sometimes created truth commissions to achieve policy goals. Finally, truth commissions have sometimes been set up in wellestablished democracies in order to address historical wrongs that occurred in previous generations. One may quibble about whether these different types of investigative commissions belong in the same category. However, Often in policy and academic debates, these types of investigations are lumped together for the purposes of theory building and hypothesis testing.
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- The Global Impact and Legacy of Truth Commissions , pp. 247 - 268Publisher: IntersentiaPrint publication year: 2019
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