Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Editor's Note
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Abbreviations
- List of Authors
- Fighting Impunity: African States and the International Criminal Court
- The Rome Statute and Universal Human Rights
- Challenging the Culture of Impunity for Sexual and Gender-Based Crimes
- Impunity Through Immunity: The Kenya Situation and the International Criminal Court
- Defence Perspectives: State Cooperation and ICC Detention: A Decade Past an Arrest Warrant
- Towards a Multi-Layered System of International Criminal Justice
- Complementarity in Practice and ICC Implementing Legislation: Lessons from Uganda
- Looking Back, Looking Forward: The Implications of the Termination of the Kenyatta Case Before the ICC
- Transforming Legal Concepts and Gender Perceptions
- Exploring Efforts to Resolve the Tension Between the AU and the ICC over the Bashir Saga
- When We Don't Speak the Same Language: The Challenges of Multilingual Justice at the ICC
- The Role of the African Union in International Criminal Justice: Force for Good or Bad?
- A Seed for World Peace Growing in Africa: The Kampala Amendments on the Crime of Aggression and the Monsoon of Malabo
- The Rights of Victims of Serious Violations of International Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law: A Human Rights Perspective
- Boko Haram's Insurgency in Nigeria: Exploring the Justice, Peace and Reconciliation Pathways
- Ten Years of International Criminal Court Practice – Trials, Achievements and Tribulations: Is the ICC Today what Africa Expects or Wants?
- Universal Jurisdiction, African Perceptions of the International Criminal Court and the New AU Protocol on Amendments to the Protocol on the Statute of the African Court of Justice and Human Rights
- Punishment as Prevention? The International Criminal Court and the Prevention of International Crimes
- Complementarity and Africa: Tackling International Crimes at the Domestic Level
- The Legacy of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
- Can there be Justice Without Reparations? Identifying Gaps in Gender Justice
- Transitional Justice and the ICC: Lessons from Rwanda
- Looking Forward, Anticipating Challenges: Making Sense of Disjunctures in Meanings of Culpability
- Building the Base: Local Accountability for Conflict-Period Sexual Violence
- Safety and Security of Protected Witnesses and Acquitted and Released Persons: Lessons from the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
- Bridging the Legal Gap: The International Initiative for Opening Negotiations on a Multilateral Treaty for Mutual Legal Assistance and Extradition in the Domestic Prosecution of Atrocity Crimes
Transitional Justice and the ICC: Lessons from Rwanda
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 December 2017
- Frontmatter
- Foreword
- Editor's Note
- Preface
- Contents
- List of Abbreviations
- List of Authors
- Fighting Impunity: African States and the International Criminal Court
- The Rome Statute and Universal Human Rights
- Challenging the Culture of Impunity for Sexual and Gender-Based Crimes
- Impunity Through Immunity: The Kenya Situation and the International Criminal Court
- Defence Perspectives: State Cooperation and ICC Detention: A Decade Past an Arrest Warrant
- Towards a Multi-Layered System of International Criminal Justice
- Complementarity in Practice and ICC Implementing Legislation: Lessons from Uganda
- Looking Back, Looking Forward: The Implications of the Termination of the Kenyatta Case Before the ICC
- Transforming Legal Concepts and Gender Perceptions
- Exploring Efforts to Resolve the Tension Between the AU and the ICC over the Bashir Saga
- When We Don't Speak the Same Language: The Challenges of Multilingual Justice at the ICC
- The Role of the African Union in International Criminal Justice: Force for Good or Bad?
- A Seed for World Peace Growing in Africa: The Kampala Amendments on the Crime of Aggression and the Monsoon of Malabo
- The Rights of Victims of Serious Violations of International Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law: A Human Rights Perspective
- Boko Haram's Insurgency in Nigeria: Exploring the Justice, Peace and Reconciliation Pathways
- Ten Years of International Criminal Court Practice – Trials, Achievements and Tribulations: Is the ICC Today what Africa Expects or Wants?
- Universal Jurisdiction, African Perceptions of the International Criminal Court and the New AU Protocol on Amendments to the Protocol on the Statute of the African Court of Justice and Human Rights
- Punishment as Prevention? The International Criminal Court and the Prevention of International Crimes
- Complementarity and Africa: Tackling International Crimes at the Domestic Level
- The Legacy of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
- Can there be Justice Without Reparations? Identifying Gaps in Gender Justice
- Transitional Justice and the ICC: Lessons from Rwanda
- Looking Forward, Anticipating Challenges: Making Sense of Disjunctures in Meanings of Culpability
- Building the Base: Local Accountability for Conflict-Period Sexual Violence
- Safety and Security of Protected Witnesses and Acquitted and Released Persons: Lessons from the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
- Bridging the Legal Gap: The International Initiative for Opening Negotiations on a Multilateral Treaty for Mutual Legal Assistance and Extradition in the Domestic Prosecution of Atrocity Crimes
Summary
INTRODUCTION
This article explores the transitional justice mechanisms that were employed in Rwanda's post genocide era and extracts lessons that could be amenable to the International Criminal Court. A key question for the ICC to consider is how best to shape efforts internationally and domestically in order to ensure accountability for mass atrocities. Rwanda is one of the few African countries to have had its cases of international crimes prosecuted nationally as well as internationally. The solutions which arose in its milieu were the establishment of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) by the UN Security Council (UNSC), whilst localised endeavours came in the form of, inter alia, the gacaca court system.
The salient lessons for the ICC are the following: (1) both international and grassroots transitional justice strategies can foster a sense of local ownership, though in different ways – with the international mechanisms focusing on the broad collective level by prosecuting those most responsible for orchestrating the Rwandan genocide, while the localised courts focused on the individual level; (2) there is a need for a customised approach to accountability; (3) whilst there are benefits in prosecution, this approach has some limitations; and (4) there is no ‘one-size-fits-all’ transitional justice system that can be used in any post-conflict situation. Yet, as a legal experiment that had no precedent, the legal pluralist system defined by a combination of the ICTR and the gacaca courts represents a possible model for delivering transitional justice that could be utilised and contextualised by the ICC in future post-conflict environments.
In 1994, Rwanda witnessed one of the worst mass atrocities ever perpetrated in history. Since then, there have been other ethnically infused political upheavals on the African continent – in Kenya, Côte d';Ivoire, South Sudan, and more recently in the Central African Republic (CAR).
Transitional justice has acquired international recognition as it encompasses a multitude of short-term, distinct, though overlapping and oft en conflicting, judicial/non-judicial mechanisms/processes that address periods of conflict or repressive rule. A dominant subject in the area of post-conflict reconstruction and transitional justice has been legal pluralism. This is an arena where various legal systems cohabit within the same social space in order to advance just corollaries.
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- Information
- The International Criminal Court and AfricaOne Decade On, pp. 549 - 592Publisher: IntersentiaPrint publication year: 2016