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The Cambridge Handbook of Victim Engagement in Transitional Justice

Edited by: Tine Destrooper, Elke Evrard

ISBN13: 9781009671422
To be Published: March 2026
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £135.00





How have victims shaped – and reshaped – transitional justice? This volume introduces a novel framework for tracing and interpreting the evolving trajectories of victim-survivor engagement across different phases of grassroots activism, institutional participation, and various forms of resistance. Drawing on a diverse range of empirical case studies from across the globe, the handbook provides both a historical analysis of victims' evolving roles in (formal, informal, and everyday) transitional justice processes and a comparative perspective on the realities of victim engagement today – highlighting increasingly intersecting justice struggles and the porous boundaries of transitional justice. Written for students, scholars, practitioners, and policymakers in transitional justice, human rights, international law, peacebuilding, and social movements, this interdisciplinary resource draws on innovative, on-the-ground practices and the protagonism of victims to foster conceptual and methodological innovation for a forward-looking reimagination of victim-led justice after large-scale violence.

Subjects:
Human Rights and Civil Liberties
Contents:
Introduction: tracing victim engagement across different spaces and moments in time
Tine Destrooper and Elke Evrard

Part I. Generations of Victim Engagement:
1. Seeking the missing: relatives' and activists' protagonism in the search for Chile's disappeared
Mauricio Carrasco and Cath Collins
2. Victimhood, agency and the mobilisation of empathy
Cheryl Lawther
3. Victim engagement in reparations and the role of conflict-related classifications
Thorsten Bonacker
4. Exploring relational agency in collective mobilization for justice: Saturday Mothers Movement in Turkey
Güneş Daşlı
5. Searching for the disappeared: victim participation, recognition and procedural justice – lessons learnt from Colombia and El Salvador
Mina Rauschenbach and Briony Jones
6. Formal participation, de facto exclusion? The impact of transitional justice standardisation in Uganda for affected communities and victims
Thomas Obel Hansen
7. Why now, to what end and how? A victim-oriented examination of the ICC Office of the prosecutor's policy on complementarity and cooperation
Miracle Chinwenmeri Uche
8. Beyond the extraordinary chambers in the courts of Cambodia: tracing the nexus between Buddhist justice and formal transitional justice approaches
Fangyi Li
9. Truth processes and victim participation in the United States of America: an examination of Maryland and California
Brianne McGonigle Leyh
10. Reparations as resistance
Luke Moffett
11. storying participation: memoir, victim engagement, and 'quiet' transitional justice
Lauren Dempster and Kevin Hearty
12. Victim mobilisation as transformative local process after mass violence: families of the missing in Nepal
Simon Robins and Ram Kumar Bhandari
13. Breaking the mould? Social movements and the 'ideal victim' of conflict-related sexual and gender-based violence in Colombia's transitional justice
Daniela Suárez Vargas
14. Archives of desire: listening to bottom-up consultations on the design of transitional justice mechanisms in Sri Lanka
Chulani Kodikara

Part II. Intersecting Justice Struggles and How to Understand Them:
15. Intersecting injustices: diasporic (dis-)engagement in Syrian justice struggles
Mina Ibrahim, Maria Hartmann and Susanne Buckley-Zistel
16. Lots to gain and little to lose: mobilising transitional justice as a means to connect various justice struggles in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Kim Baudewijns
17. Bridging the gap: transitional justice, victims, and business and human rights in Colombia
Marta Paricio Montesinos
18. Relational justice through meaningful participation in reparations processes
Pamina Firchow and Lisa J. Laplante
19. Victim's bottom-up participation through theatre of the oppressed in an aparadigmatic transitional justice context: The Case of Afghanistan
Huma Saeed
20. Participatory research in postwar El Salvador: co-creation of community history books with civil war survivors and local youth
Adriana Alas, Amanda Grzyb and María Helia Rivera Castillo
21. Technology for justice in Latin America: a (partial) account of the awkward interaction between technology and human rights in the quest for justice
Michael Reed-Hurtado
Concluding thoughts: a future outlook on the study and practice of victim engagement in transitional justice
Elke Evrard and Tine Destrooper