Transitional Justice (S)
LAWJD696
Atrocity crimes--including genocide, war crimes, and crimes against humanity--continue to rage around the world. This course examines origins, operations, and outcomes of historical and contemporary measures to address such heinous offenses. We will consider the full range of judicial, legislative, and executive options available to policymakers as societies emerge from periods of violence and repression. These "transitional justice" mechanisms include war crimes tribunals (such as the International Criminal Court), truth commissions, amnesties, lustration, exile, indefinite detention, lethal force, and inaction. The course draws on various case studies, including present-day Ukraine, Syria, and Myanmar; Rwanda and the Balkans in the 1990s; and World War II. Readings address the legal, political, and philosophical underpinnings of justice; questions of institutional design; and how different societies have balanced competing legal, policy, and moral imperatives. UPPER-CLASS WRITING REQUIREMENT: This class may be used to satisfy the requirement. ** A student who fails to attend the initial meeting of a seminar (designated by an (S) in the title), or to obtain permission to be absent from either the instructor or the Registrar, may be administratively dropped from the seminar. Students who are on a wait list for a seminar are required to attend the first seminar meeting to be considered for enrollment.