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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.

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

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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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Strengthening Indigenous Rights through Truth Commissions

ICTJ hosted a conference on “Strengthening Indigenous Rights through Truth Commissions” July 19-21, 2011. Regional and international experts convened to discuss how truth commissions can incorporate and address indigenous peoples’ rights. Videos of each session and summaries of the conference proceedings are available.

In Focus
  • Truth and Memory
  • Kenya
  • Canada
  • Colombia
  • Guatemala
  • Peru
  • United States
  • Burma/Myanmar
  • Indonesia
  • Nepal
  • . . .

Strengthening Indigenous Rights through Truth Commissions: A Practitioner's Resource

Indigenous peoples are among those most affected by contemporary conflict. The resource-rich territories they occupy are coveted by powerful, often violent groups. Their identity is perceived with mistrust, sometimes with hate. Indigenous communities live at a precarious intersection between unresolved historic injustices and the contemporary incursion of industry and political violence.

Report
  • Truth and Memory
  • Africa
  • Americas
  • Canada
  • Guatemala
  • Peru
  • Asia and Oceania
  • Nepal
  • . . .

Strengthening Indigenous Rights through Truth Commissions: A Practitioner's Resource

In societies confronting the legacies of war, tyranny, or entrenched injustice, the experiences of indigenous people have often been marginalized. ICTJ has published a handbook offering guidance on planning truth commissions and commissions of inquiry that safeguard the interests of indigenous communities and address violations against them.

In Focus
  • Truth and Memory
  • Americas
  • Canada
  • Guatemala
  • Peru
  • Asia and Oceania
  • Nepal
  • . . .

Strengthening Rule of Law, Accountability, and Acknowledgment in Haiti

Haiti is currently confronting several challenges regarding stability, the rule of law, and corruption. The establishment of the United Nations Mission for Justice Support in Haiti (MINUJUSTH) in April 2017 is aimed at contributing to state and civil society efforts to effectively address those challenges.

Briefing Paper
  • Institutional Reform
  • Truth and Memory
  • Americas

Strengthening Synergies Between Reparations and Development Programs in Uganda

Over the last 15 years, the Ugandan government has implemented a series of recovery and reconstruction programs in Northern Uganda to address the social and economic devastation caused by the two-decade armed conflict in the region and set it on the path to sustainable peace. While these development programs alone cannot fulfill the state’s obligation to provide reparations to victims of human rights violations, if designed well, they can form a foundation upon which future reparations initiatives can be built.

In Focus
  • Youth Engagement
  • Institutional Reform
  • Gender Justice
  • Truth and Memory
  • Reparations
  • Africa
  • Uganda
  • . . .

Stubborn for Our Gender: The Gambia Study on Opportunities for Reparations for Victims and Survivors of Sexual and Gender-Based Violence

This report presents findings from research on the needs and expectations of survivors of sexual and gender-based violence in The Gambia. Based on focus group discussions with survivors and other stakeholders, it analyses obstacles to, as well as opportunities to improve, survivors’ access to justice and reparations. It urges all relevant actors, including the Gambian government, to establish and implement a national, comprehensive, gender-sensitive, and victim-centered reparations program.

Report
  • Prevention
  • Sustainable Development Goals
  • Institutional Reform
  • Gender Justice
  • Truth and Memory
  • Reparations
  • Africa
  • The Gambia
  • . . .

Students Lead the Way: A Vote in Favor of Reparations for Slavery

In the United States, the debate over a national reparations program for slavery and Jim Crow has until now encountered political opposition. However, transitional justice approaches at the community level are increasingly surfacing to address racial injustice. A handful of 2020 presidential candidates have come out in support of reparations for slavery. Recently, Georgetown University took center stage in this debate when its student body voted in favor of a student-led initiative to establish a fee that will fund education and health care programs for the descendants of 272 enslaved persons sold by the university in 1838.

Opinion
  • Reparations
  • Americas
  • United States

Studies on Transitional Justice in Context: Addressing Corruption Through Justice-Sensitive Security Sector Reform

Corruption is often uncritically assumed to be part of the way things work in transitional and post-conflict countries. Corruption is even argued to be beneficial to development, in that it “greases the wheels of bureaucracy” and gets things done. Under pressure to establish short-term stability in post-conflict settings, peace-builders and negotiators will sometimes make deals with the power brokers who started the conflict, shopping out political positions and control over state assets while turning a blind eye to questionable control of public funds.

Briefing Paper

Submission to Committee A of the National Parliament on the Draft Law Establishing the Institute for Memory

Providing the Minister for Social Solidarity with the unfettered discretion to dismiss and appoint members of the institute’s Governing Board renders the institute vulnerable to politicization and undermines the institute’s ‘technical, administrative and financial autonomy.

Briefing Paper
  • Institutional Reform
  • Asia and Oceania
  • Timor-Leste

Sudan: Impact of the Rome Statute and the International Criminal Court

Few conflicts have garnered as much attention as the recent one in Darfur. Widespread atrocities reported by several organizations including an International Commission of Investigation compelled the United Nations (UN) Security Council to refer the situation in the western region of Sudan to the International Criminal Court (ICC) in March 2005.

Briefing Paper
  • Criminal Justice
  • Africa
  • Sudan

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