#TransitionalJustice

Berghof Foundationberghoffnd@mstdn.social
2025-11-17

#transitionaljustice provides pathways for transforming violent pasts into peaceful futures.

Our Global Learning Hub for Transitional Justice and Reconciliation brought together practitioners to identify challenges and formulate recommendations.

Learn more: brnw.ch/21wXySG

2025-11-07

New on our blog!

#51 Transitional Justice auf dem Prüfstand

Diese Folge nimmt Transitional Justice (TJ) genauer unter die Lupe. Unter TJ versteht man rechtliche und politische Maßnahmen, die darauf abzielen, eine gewaltvolle Vergangenheit aufzuarbeiten und zu  einer  neuen,  gerechteren Ordnung  beizutragen. Zu den zentralen Instrumenten zählen die strafrechtliche Verfolgung schwerer

#TransitionalJustice

voelkerrechtsblog.org/51-trans

Headlines Africaafrica@journa.host
2025-10-31

Africa: Transitional Justice in Sudan - Between a Long-Standing Elusive Quest and the Foundation for an Alternative Future: [African Arguments] Debating Ideas reflects the values and editorial ethos of the African Arguments book series, publishing engaged, often radical, scholarship, original and activist writing from within the African continent and beyond. It offers debates and engagements, contexts… newsfeed.facilit8.network/TNzn #TransitionalJustice #Sudan #AfricanArguments #SocialJustice #Activism

Headlines Africaafrica@journa.host
2025-10-29

Africa: Gambia's Transitional Justice Momentum Must Not Falter: [ISS] As delays fuel public concerns, the government and ECOWAS must turn political will into action with the help of international partners. newsfeed.facilit8.network/TNy3 #Gambia #TransitionalJustice #ECOWAS #PoliticalWill #JusticeForAll

Saxafi MediaSaxafi
2025-10-11
خبرگزاری کوکچهkokchapress
2025-09-09

The SNHR report underscores the need for a balanced approach to transitional justice and civil peace in Syria, warning against the Civil Peace Committee’s overreach and lack of transparency. 🌍⚖️

kokcha.news/8146/syrian-networ

Gender-Responsive Ceasefire and Justice for Women in Sudan

Author(s): Scott Douglas Jacobsen

Publication (Outlet/Website): The Good Men Project

Publication Date (yyyy/mm/dd): 2025/05/17

 Aya Chebbi, Founder and President of the Nala Feminist Collective, explains the urgent launch of a 2025 petition demanding a gender-responsive ceasefire in Sudan, led by Sudanese feminists. She describes how sexual violence is weaponized systematically by armed groups to terrorize and destabilize communities. Chebbi outlines strategies to pressure warring factions, including enforcing arms embargoes, freezing assets, and leveraging regional diplomacy. She emphasizes the need for local feminist leadership in peace negotiations, sustained international support for grassroots efforts, and parallel mechanisms for justice through hybrid tribunals and survivor-led initiatives to ensure accountability without delaying peace processes.

Scott Douglas Jacobsen: What inspired the Nala Feminist Collective to launch this petition in 2025?

Aya Chebbi: This petition was born out of a sense of urgent necessity and profound solidarity. As the violence in Sudan intensified, we witnessed Sudanese women  from grassroots activists to global advocates, raising alarms that were tragically ignored. The devastating silence surrounding the widespread rape, abduction and brutalization of women and girls in Sudan compelled us to act.

Nalafem, as a Pan-African collective dedicated to advancing the political leadership of African women, established the Nalafem Sudan Taskforce. This platform for collective action is Sudanese feminist-led, multigenerational, coalition mobilizing political, diplomatic and international pressure for an inclusive, gender-responsive ceasefire process in Sudan and ensuring taskforce members reach critical decision-making spaces, from the African Union to the United Nations. The taskforce initiated this petition to demand an immediate ceasefire, center the experiences of survivors and insist on women’s leadership not as an afterthought to peace, but as an essential precondition for it.

Jacobsen: How is sexual violence weaponized against women and girls in Sudan?

Chebbi: Rape in Sudan is not a random occurrence, it is a deliberate tactic. Armed actors are employing sexual violence to terrorize communities, dismantle social structures and exert control. Tragically, women’s bodies have become battlegrounds in this conflict, particularly in Darfur and within displacement camps, where impunity is rampant and justice is consistently delayed or denied. The pervasive use of sexual violence as a weapon of war is one of the most pressing and horrifying realities of this crisis. Women and girls are enduring abductions, rape, starvation, displacement and systematic erasure. These are not unintended consequences, they are calculated strategies of war. The limited humanitarian access and the international community’s silence only exacerbate this climate of impunity.

Jacobsen: What strategies could persuade the Sudanese Army, RSF, and armed groups to agree to a peace deal?

Chebbi: A combination of sustained pressure and meaningful incentives is essential. This includes enforcing existing arms embargoes, freezing assets and actively denying political legitimacy to any parties that obstruct peace efforts. Simultaneously, it’s crucial to leverage the influence of regional actors and offer viable humanitarian corridors, as well as transitional justice frameworks that provide face-saving exit strategies while ensuring accountability for their actions.

Jacobsen: How do we enforce the African Union’s “Silencing the Guns” initiative and UN Security Council arms embargo?

Chebbi: Enforcement requires genuine political will, far beyond mere declarations. The AU and UN must commit to investing in independent monitoring mechanisms, imposing sanctions on violators and suspending trade and aid relationships with any states that facilitate the flow of arms. Additionally, civil society organizations must be adequately resourced to actively track and expose violations.

Jacobsen: What barriers prevent adequate aid delivery?

Chebbi: Access is severely impeded by ongoing violence, excessive bureaucratic hurdles and intentional obstruction. Warring factions are deliberately targeting aid convoys, manipulating logistical processes and restricting the issuance of humanitarian visas. These bureaucratic obstacles and security risks are stifling critical life-saving efforts.

Jacobsen: How can international donors and governments overcome these logistical hurdles?

Chebbi: International donors must prioritize funding for locally based feminist groups that are already operating on the ground and deeply embedded within their communities. It is also necessary to find ways to bypass obstructive regimes and invest in flexible, rapid response mechanisms, such as the civilian-led Emergency Response Rooms. In addition, diplomatic pressure must be consistently applied to secure ceasefires specifically in areas designated for aid delivery.

Jacobsen: Research indicates peace agreements with women’s participation are durable. How can Sudanese women and feminist leaders sit at the negotiating table?

Chebbi: Indeed peace agreements are 35% more likely to last at least 15 years when women are meaningfully involved in their creation. Ensuring the meaningful participation of women requires making their inclusion a non-negotiable condition. Quotas alone are insufficient, there must be structural guarantees and dedicated funding to support feminist delegations. The international community must move beyond token gestures of including women and instead actively resource them as lead negotiators and recognized experts on peacebuilding. We have members of the taskforce who are experts yet denied a seat at many tables and closed door meetings that can facilitate pathways to peace. 

Jacobsen: What mechanisms ensure perpetrators of war crimes are held accountable without delaying the peace process?

Chebbi: Implementing hybrid tribunals and transitional justice models can allow both peace and justice to progress in parallel. Initiatives such as truth commissions, survivor-led documentation efforts and reparations programs can commence even before formal trials begin. Accountability should not be seen as an obstacle to peace, but rather as a fundamental cornerstone upon which a lasting peace can be built.

Jacobsen: Thank you for the opportunity and your time, Aya. 

Last updated May 3, 2025. These terms govern all In Sight Publishing content—past, present, and future—and supersede any prior notices.In Sight Publishing by Scott Douglas Jacobsen is licensed under a Creative Commons BY‑NC‑ND 4.0; © In Sight Publishing by Scott Douglas Jacobsen 2012–Present. All trademarksperformancesdatabases & branding are owned by their rights holders; no use without permission. Unauthorized copying, modification, framing or public communication is prohibited. External links are not endorsed. Cookies & tracking require consent, and data processing complies with PIPEDA & GDPR; no data from children < 13 (COPPA). Content meets WCAG 2.1 AA under the Accessible Canada Act & is preserved in open archival formats with backups. Excerpts & links require full credit & hyperlink; limited quoting under fair-dealing & fair-use. All content is informational; no liability for errors or omissions: Feedback welcome, and verified errors corrected promptly. For permissions or DMCA notices, email: scott.jacobsen2025@gmail.com. Site use is governed by BC laws; content is “as‑is,” liability limited, users indemnify us; moral, performers’ & database sui generis rights reserved.

#armsEmbargoes #feministLeadership #genderCeasefire #sexualViolence #transitionalJustice

Headlines Africaafrica@journa.host
2025-06-30

Southern Africa: Does SADC's Post-Conflict Reconstruction Plan Marginalise Transitional Justice?: [ISS] Without several amendments to its draft framework, SADC will struggle to help member states address their abusive pasts. newsfeed.facilit8.network/TLdf #SouthernAfrica #SADC #TransitionalJustice #PostConflictReconstruction #HumanRights

2025-06-24

Valuing the civilian man: rethinking masculinity in transitional justice

“Not because masculine man equals bad, civilian man equals good, but because in valuing civilian masculinity we create options for men and we challenge those who profit from essentialised ideas of masculinity.”

Read our article by Myfanwy CARVILLE 👉 sharedfuture.news/valuing-the-

#SharedFuture #NorthernIreland #peacebuilding #justice #transitionaljustice #genderstudies #booklaunch

HarbouchaNewsHarbouchaNews
2025-06-04

Justice at Last: El Salvador Convicts Former Military Officers for 1982 Murder of Dutch Journalists






eng.harbouchanews.com/2025/06/

Headlines Africaafrica@journa.host
2025-05-14

Africa: Ethiopia's National Dialogue and Transitional Justice - Competition or Complementarity?: [ISS] The dual peacebuilding processes are equally important - and can run simultaneously through coordination and sequencing. newsfeed.facilit8.network/TKlz #Ethiopia #NationalDialogue #TransitionalJustice #Peacebuilding #ConflictResolution

Berghof Foundationberghoffnd@mstdn.social
2025-05-05

After wars and dictatorships, it's not only the visible scars that remain.

Our Global Learning Hub for #TransitionalJustice and #Reconciliation addresses how collective processes allow for healing after mass atrocities based on reflections from the field.

📕: brnw.ch/21wSpLS

2025-02-07

In the 1960s Japan and the ROC government had a secret deal to deport Taiwanese independence activists to Taiwan. Activists in Japan fighting against these deportations went on to found Amnesty International Japan in 1970

taipeitimes.com/News/feat/arch

#Taiwan #Japan #history #TransitionalJustice #AmnestyInternational #台灣 #轉型正義

2025-01-21

#Serbia​'s memory politics between EU norms and national narratives: Talk by Nikola Gajić (#LeibnizIOS) in the lecture series War. Peace. Security. on #Srebrenica recognition and #TransitionalJustice in EU accession processes.
📅 22 Jan | 14:15 CET | Regensburg
➡️ leibniz-ios.de/en/events/detai

Image for a lecture in the 'War. Peace. Security.' series at the Leibniz ScienceCampus Regensburg. The talk by Nikola Gajić is titled '(Un)conditional Europeanisation: Memory politics in Serbia surrounding the Yugoslav wars and EU integration', taking place on January 22, 2025, 14:15, at H 26.
Sascha Klotzbüchersaschak@sciences.social
2024-11-19
Professor Brandon Hamberbrandonhamber@mastodon.ie
2024-11-15

🚨 Breaking barriers in #TransitionalJustice! Here is a link to our new book, "Masculinities and Queer Perspectives in Transitional Justice", edited by Philipp Schulz, Brandon Hamber and Heleen Touquet. It is FREE to download: tinyurl.com/MQTJ2024

Professor Brandon Hamberbrandonhamber@mastodon.ie
2024-11-08

Our new book "Masculinities and Queer Perspectives in Transitional Justice" edited by Philipp Schulz, Brandon Hamber and Heleen Touquet is now out.

It is free to download: tinyurl.com/MQTJ2024

#TransitionalJustice

Bruce BroomhallBruceBroomhall
2024-10-07

In circles, is talked about as healing, as a source of and .

illustrates how the Israeli State instead weaponizes memory in order to foreclose reconciliation and justify endless oppression.

theguardian.com/us-news/ng-int

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