1st Edition

Transitional Justice and the Arab Spring

Edited By Kirsten Fisher, Robert Stewart Copyright 2014
    268 Pages
    by Routledge

    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book presents a varied and critical picture of how the Arab Spring demands a re-examination and re-conceptualization of issues of transitional justice. It demonstrates how unique features of this wave of revolutions and popular protests that have swept the Arab world since December 2010 give rise to distinctive concerns and problems relative to transitional justice. The contributors explore how these issues in turn add fresh perspective and nuance to the field more generally. In so doing, it explores fundamental questions of social justice, reconstruction and healing in the context of the Arab Spring.

    Including the perspectives of academics and practitioners, Transitional Justice and the Arab Spring will be of considerable interest to those working on the politics of the Middle East, normative political theory, transitional justice, international law, international relations and human rights.

    Foreword Anthony Lang Jr.  After the Arab Spring: A New Wave of Transitional Justice? Kirsten J. Fisher and Robert Stewart  Part One: The Context and Getting Arab Spring Transitional Justice Right  1. The Arab World after the Popular Uprisings: A Spirit Restored? Bassel F. Salloukh  2. Building a Future, Exhuming the Past: The Struggles for Accountability in the Wake of Regional Uprisings Anne Massagee 3. Transitional Justice in the Wake of the Arab Uprisings: Complexity and Standardization Habib Nassar  4. Difficult but Ultimately Rewarding: Lessons from Transitional Justice in Latin America Andrew G. Reiter  5. The Costs of Avoiding Transitional Justice: Lessons from Lebanon Ora Szekely  6. Risks and Rewards: Lessons from Central and Eastern Europe’s Transitional Justice Experiences Klaus Bachmann, Robert Stewart and Kirsten J. Fisher  Part Two: Issues Pertaining to Arab Spring Transitional Justice  7.Challenges of Representation and Inclusion: a Case study of Islamist Groups in Transitional Justice Line Khatib  8. Transitional Justice and the Arab Spring from a Gender Perspective Elham Manea  9. Egypt and the Struggle for Accountability and Justice Michael Wahid Hanna 10. Justice After the War: The ICC and Post-Gaddafi Libya Mark Kersten  11. Selectivity, Legitimacy and the Pursuit of Post-Arab Spring International Criminal Justice Kirsten J. Fisher  12. Transitions in the Middle East and North Africa: New Trajectories and Challenges for Transitional Justice? Hugo van der Merwe Index

    Biography

    Kirsten J. Fisher is a researcher at the Human Rights Research and Education Centre, University of Ottawa and an affiliated research fellow at the Erik Castrén Institute of International Law and Human Rights, University of Helsinki. She is the author of Moral Accountability and International Criminal Law and Transitional Justice for Child Soldiers.

    Robert Stewart is a researcher at McGill University’s Interuniversity Consortium for Arab and Middle Eastern Studies, and has recently returned to his doctoral studies at the University of Exeter. His work focuses on Islamist groups and Islamist political parties, as well as on transitional justice in the Arab world.

    "Transitional Justice and the Arab Spring is focused not on the past but on the future of the Middle East and North Africa, and takes a largely thematic approach to examining the various actors, both local and international, and the dynamics at play in a region that has experienced more political change in the last five years than in the previous half-century...the book also seeks to understand how a liberal transitional justice can engage with an often illiberal political Islam, as well as address the issues of poverty and unemployment that drove the revolutions of the Arab Spring."-Simon Robins, Transitional Justice,Volume 9 Issue 1.