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We work side by side with victims to obtain acknowledgment and redress for massive human rights violations, hold those responsible to account, reform and build democratic institutions, and prevent the recurrence of violence or repression.

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What Is Transitional Justice?

Transitional justice refers to how societies respond to the legacies of massive and serious human rights violations. It asks some of the most difficult questions in law, politics, and the social sciences and grapples with innumerable dilemmas. Above all, transitional justice is about victims.

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Vision + Mission

We work side by side with victims to obtain acknowledgment and redress for massive human rights violations, hold those responsible to account, reform and build democratic institutions, and prevent the recurrence of violence or repression.

  • How We Work
  • Our Team
  • Our Impact + Annual Reports
  • Our Donors + Financial Reports
  • Our Story

What Is Transitional Justice?

Transitional justice refers to how societies respond to the legacies of massive and serious human rights violations. It asks some of the most difficult questions in law, politics, and the social sciences and grapples with innumerable dilemmas. Above all, transitional justice is about victims.

  • Criminal Justice
  • Reparations
  • Truth and Memory
  • Institutional Reform
  • Gender Justice
  • Youth Engagement
  • Sustainable Development Goals
  • Prevention
  • Peace Processes

Browse the Resource Library

The Resource Library stores all of ICTJ’s published works since 2001 to the present, grouped by category and searchable by key word, country, issue, language, and more.

Search the Resource Library by Type

Publications

Access our reports, briefing papers, books, educational resources, and archived materials. 

News

Find our feature stories, opinion articles, and press releases. 

Multimedia

Search our videos, photo galleries, audio recordings, and interactive products.

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New Guide Explores Realities Facing Syria’s Disappeared, Arbitrarily Detained, and Their Families

New York, March 1, 2022—“There can be no peace in Syria until the rights of the wrongfully detained, disappeared, and their families are fully restored,” warns a new publication released today by the Bridges of Truth, a collaborative of eight Syrian civil society organizations and ICTJ. A Guide to...

Press Release
  • Criminal Justice
  • Youth Engagement
  • Institutional Reform
  • Gender Justice
  • Truth and Memory
  • Reparations
  • Middle East and North Africa
  • Syria
  • . . .

Judicial Independence in Tunisia in Grave Danger

On February 6, 2022, President Kaies Saied announced that he would dissolve Tunisia’s Supreme Judicial Council. While his supporters welcomed the declaration with satisfaction, many more across broad segments of society greeted it with outrage and resentment. That the president made this unilateral announcement on the premises of the Ministry of Interior—responsible for public security—stung all the more, as if to send a message that he would not hesitate to use executive power to counter perceived disobedience, judicial or otherwise.

Opinion
  • Criminal Justice
  • Institutional Reform
  • Truth and Memory
  • Middle East and North Africa
  • Tunisia
  • . . .

No True Democracy without Justice: Tunis Conference on Transitional Justice

TUNIS, Apr. 14, 2011—The international conference on transitional justice, Addressing the Past, Building the Future, opened this morning in Tunis with more than 150 participants from Tunisia and other countries of the Middle East and North Africa. In sessions dealing with transitional justice...

Press Release
  • Tunisia

Libya: Sustained International Support Required for Justice in Libya

NEW YORK, Mar. 3, 2011—The international community should maintain the robust stance for accountability in Libya that it has shown in recent days, said the International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) today after welcoming the decision of the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court...

Press Release
  • Africa

Ivory Coast: Perpetrators of Abidjan Market Shelling Must Be Brought to Justice

NEW YORK, Mar. 18, 2011—“Those responsible for the shelling of a market in Abidjan must be identified and held accountable,” said ICTJ president David Tolbert referring to yesterday’s attack on a food market in Abobo, a suburb of the Ivory Coast’s capital, in which 100 people were killed or wounded...

Press Release
  • Criminal Justice
  • Africa
  • Cote d’Ivoire

Prevention Is the First Imperative of Justice: Transitional Justice, Prevention, and the Future—and Past—of Peacebuilding

Transitional justice can contribute to prevention of violence and abuse, particularly if it addresses common drivers such as exclusion and associated grievances. It can facilitate the inclusion of social groups that have suffered human rights violations and marginalization, and promote long-term...

In Focus
  • Peace Processes
  • Prevention
  • Sustainable Development Goals
  • Institutional Reform
  • . . .

ICTJ to Release New Report on Transitional Justice and Foreign Fighters

New York, December 10, 2021—In contexts such as Afghanistan, Bosnia, Chechnya, Iraq, Somalia, and Syria, hundreds, sometimes thousands, of individuals have crossed national borders to engage in violent conflicts in which serious human rights violations and mass atrocities have been committed...

Press Release
  • Criminal Justice
  • Youth Engagement
  • Institutional Reform
  • Gender Justice
  • Africa
  • Kenya
  • Asia and Oceania
  • Afghanistan
  • Europe
  • The former Yugoslavia
  • Middle East and North Africa
  • Iraq
  • Syria
  • . . .

ICTJ Honors the Winners of the Wide Awake Art Contest in Lebanon and Tunisia

Tunis, March 22, 2022­—The International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) will hold a series of cultural activities from March 21 through March 26, 2022, as part of its Wide Awake Art Contest. The contest, launched in January, invited Lebanese and Tunisian artists, as well as expat artists...

Press Release
  • Youth Engagement
  • Gender Justice
  • Truth and Memory
  • Middle East and North Africa
  • Lebanon
  • Tunisia
  • . . .

A Just Peace for a Besieged Ukraine

In the latest round of negotiations between Ukraine and Russia, the Turkish president called on both delegations to act responsibly and agree to a ceasefire. He reminded them of their historical mission to achieve a "just peace." While we may not know how and when this conflict will end, we already know some of what Ukrainian society will be grappling with in the near future. Significant portions of country’s civilian infrastructure have been destroyed. More than 4 million Ukrainians are now refugees; another 10 million are internally displaced; and a rising but still undetermined number have been killed, are missing, or are wounded. The real question is what does a just peace mean for Ukrainians.

Opinion
  • Criminal Justice
  • Peace Processes
  • Prevention
  • Africa
  • Europe
  • Middle East and North Africa
  • . . .

A Historic Black Community in the United States Resists Erasure

As plans to build a massive Wegmans distribution center forge ahead, residents of the historic Black community of Brown Grove, Virginia, demand acknowledgment and redress.

In Focus
  • Institutional Reform
  • Truth and Memory
  • Reparations
  • Americas
  • United States
  • . . .

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