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Narrating Transitional Justice

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Narrating Transitional Justice asks: what are the discourses embedded in the varied stories of reconciliation actors, and how do these function as acts of state-making after atrocity?
  • 16 December 2025
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In truth and reconciliation settings, particular narratives are recounted by victims, perpetrators, witnesses, and legal experts, each employing distinct rhetorical strategies. Their testimonies, reported by the media and represented in various cultural forms, profoundly influence public understanding and collective memory in post-conflict societies.

Authored by an interdisciplinary team of international scholars across the humanities and social sciences, policymakers and cultural producers, Narrating Transitional Justice examines truth and reconciliation commissions as acts of public storytelling. Contributors elaborate on how these testimonies function as creative grist for cultural producers to reconstruct, redefine, and reappraise transitional justice work. They further examine the inimitable insights that creative imaginaries – in the form of literature, theatre, film, fine art, popular music, street art, and online media – offer about the remaking of nations fractured by long histories of human rights violations.

Critically reflecting on debates around the centrality of storytelling in transitional justice processes, Narrating Transitional Justice asks: what are the discourses embedded in the varied stories of reconciliation actors, and how do these function as acts of state-making after atrocity?

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Price: $44.95
Pages: 432
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Imprint: McGill-Queen's University Press
Series: Confronting Atrocity: Human Rights and Restorative Justice Series
Publication Date: 16 December 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780228026235
Format: Paperback
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Human Rights, LAW / International
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"This first-rate volume offers a profound justification for why we need stories for a proper conception of transitional justice." Chielozona Eze, author of Justice and Human Rights in the African Imagination

"This collection brings together humanists and social scientists from North America, Europe, Africa, and Latin America, offering an exceptionally diverse range of perspectives and methodologies on the arts of transitional justice." Eleni Coundouriotis, author of Narrating Human Rights in Africa
Paul Ugor (Editor)
Paul Ugor is professor in the Department of English Language and Literature at the University of Waterloo.

Bonny Ibhawoh (Editor)
Bonny Ibhawoh is Senator William McMaster Chair in Global Human Rights at McMaster University.