The costs of justice : how new leaders respond to previous rights abuses / Brian K. Grodsky.
2010
JC571 .G7831 2010 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
The costs of justice : how new leaders respond to previous rights abuses / Brian K. Grodsky.
Published
Notre Dame, Ind. : University of Notre Dame Press, [2010]
Copyright
©2010
Call Number
JC571 .G7831 2010
ISBN
9780268029777 (pbk. : alk. paper)
0268029776 (pbk. : alk. paper)
0268029776 (pbk. : alk. paper)
Description
x, 355 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)640515438
Summary
""An insightful, profound, and conceptually innovative analysis of the daunting challenges encountered by the new democracies in their endeavors to confront the traumatic past. Grodsky's comparative approach allows him to highlight similarities and differences between states, institutions, and elites engaged in pursuing political and moral justice. A most valuable contribution to the major ongoing debate on the relationship between democracy, history, memory, and justice."-Vladimir Tismaneanu, University of Maryland" ""Brian K. Grodsky seeks to understand the sources of diversity in transitional justice processes and, by implication, a broad range of post-conflict policy making. He develops and empirically evaluates a theoretical framework, relying on extensive original primary research and cross-national fieldwork---all things that have traditionally been lacking in much of the relevant transitional justice literature, until recently. The Costs of Justice is situated on the cutting edge of the field."-David Backer, The College of William & Mary" "In the Costs of Justice, Brian K. Grodsky provides qualitative analyses of how transitional justice processes have evolved in diverse ways in postcommunist Poland, Serbia, Croatia, and Uzbekistan. By examining the decision-making processes and goals of those actors who contributed to key transitional justice policy decisions, 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 more closely linked to its capacity to provide goods and services expected by constituents, than to political power struggles alone. 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."-- cover p.4
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 318-334) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
ix
Introduction What is Transitional Justice and Why Should We Care?
1
PART I
ch. 1
Explaining Justice: What are the Key Determinants of Transitional Justice Policy?
13
ch. 2
The Justice Spectrum: A New Methodological Approach to Studying Transitional Justice
35
ch. 3
The Peculiarities of Postcommunist Justice: Addressing Lustration
58
ch. 4
The Method of Study: Using Qualitative Data to Uncover the Path of Justice
75
PART II
ch. 5
Poland: Justice, Economics, and the End of Solidarity
95
ch. 6
Serbia and Montenegro: Justice as Yugoslavia's Most Valuable Foreign Export?
123
ch. 7
Croatia: When the Cost of Justice is Too High
149
ch. 8
Uzbekistan: Exploiting Justice Today, Facing Justice Tomorrow?
171
ch. 9
Transitional Justice in a Cross-National Perspective
190
ch. 10
Reassessing How We Think about Justice
214
NOTES
228
LIST OF INTERVIEWS
305
Poland
305
Serbia and Montenegro
308
Croatia
311
Uzbekistan
313
Washington, D.C.
316
Select Bibliography
318
Index
335