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Transitional Amnesty in South Africa [Hardcover]

Antje du Bois-Pedain (Author)

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Book Description

0521878292 978-0521878296 February 4, 2008 1
After the transition to democracy in 1994, South Africa reached out to perpetrators of violence from all conflicting parties by giving amnesty to those who fully disclosed their politically motivated crimes. This 2007 volume provides a comprehensive analysis of South Africa's amnesty scheme in its practical and normative dimensions. Through empirical analysis of over 1000 amnesty decisions made by the Amnesty Committee of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the study measures the scheme against its stated goals of truth recovery, victim empowerment and perpetrator accountability. It also explores normative questions raised by the absence of punishment. Highlighting the distinctive nature of South Africa's conditional amnesty as an exceptional 'rite of passage' into the new, post-conflict society, it argues that the amnesty scheme is best viewed as an attempt to construct a new 'justice script' for a society in transition, in which a legacy of politically motivated violence is being addressed.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"More - much more - than any prior effort to date, Professor Du Bois-Pedain has taken the closest, most detailed, and most comprehensive look at the amnesty component of South Africa's truth and reconciliation process. Her book is a tour de force, encompassing as it does both normative and empirical issues associated with the process. Generations to come will thank Du Bois-Pedain for her exposition of how and why South Africa provided amnesty to those committing gross human rights violations during the struggle over apartheid."
-James L. Gibson, Law and Politics Book Review

Book Description

Based on empirical analysis of over 1,000 decisions, du Bois-Pedain provides a comprehensive study of South Africa's amnesty process. This 2007 volume measures the amnesty scheme against its goals of truth recovery, victim empowerment and perpetrator accountability, and explores the normative questions raised by the absence of punishment.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
concluding observations, truth commission, genocide convention, political offence requirement, conditional amnesty process, amnesty scheme, security force applicants, liberation movement fighters, prosecutorial obligations, known political organisation, amnesty context, justice script, amnesty applicants, amnesty proceedings, the amnesty process, amnesty applications, indemnity legislation, amnesty hearings, implicated persons, full disclosure requirement, participatory options, secondary victimisation, forensic truth, truth recovery, indemnity laws
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Amnesty Committee, Constitutional Court, Benzien Hearing, Geneva Conventions, Rome Statute, High Court, Indemnity Act, Japie Maponya, High Command, United Kingdom, Heidelberg Tavern Hearing, Cape Town, Schoon Hearing, Anti-Apartheid Convention, Orde Boerevolk, Chris Hani, Indemnity Committee, Aboobaker Ismail, Amy Biehl, Eugene de Kock, Port Elizabeth, Nelson Mandela, Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Juan Humberto Sánchez, Conservative Party
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Surprise Me!
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