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Edited Legal Collections Data |
Book Title: Research Handbook on Transitional Justice
Editor(s): Lawther, Cheryl; Moffett, Luke; Jacobs, Dov
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
ISBN (hard cover): 9781781955307
Section: Chapter 19
Section Title: Transitional justice and reparations: Remedying the past?
Author(s): Moffett, Luke
Number of pages: 24
Abstract/Description:
Reparations are often considered victim-centred transitional justice measures. While they have their basis in private law notions of corrective justice and the human rights principle of remedy, politics and economic resources often shape reparations in times of transition. Reparations in transitional societies often take time and require revisiting as the society becomes conscious of previously hidden or marginalized victims. Added to this is the challenge of delimiting those who are eligible, and determining when the transition ends. This raises questions of whether reparations are appropriate for historical violations caused by colonial governments or slavery. The chapter examines individual and collective reparations, apportionment amongst family members, reparation processes and mechanisms, as well as evidential and financial concerns. Although public resources may be limited in providing full compensatory awards to all victims, small sums or pensions along with public acknowledgement of victims’ suffering, wrongfulness of the perpetrators and institutions’ acts, along with guarantees of non-repetition can be ‘good enough’. This chapter argues that, despite the political wrangling over reparations during transition, the right to reparations in international law reflects the necessity of states to deliver reparations to victims of serious violations. Reparations; remedy; transformation; eligibility; responsibility
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ELECD/2017/788.html