Books on the topic 'Transitional justice – Colombia'

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1

Justicia transicional en Colombia: Formulación de propuestas desde un análisis comparado. Bogotá, Colombia: Universidad Nacional de Colombia, 2008.

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2

La justicia transicional en Colombia: Un proceso en construcción : Informe Observatorio Justicia Transicional 2005-2010. Bogotá D.C: Procuraduría General de la Nación, 2011.

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3

Arboleda, Juan Felipe García. El lugar de las víctimas en Colombia: Análisis sobre las instituciones de verdad, justicia y reparación desde una perspectiva de víctimas. Bogotá, Colombia: Editorial Temis, 2013.

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4

Ambos, Kai, and Stefan Peters, eds. Transitional Justice in Colombia. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783748923534.

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The Colombian Special Jurisdiction for Peace (Jurisdicción Especial para la Paz, JEP) is the judicial centrepiece of the country’s national Transitional Justice system. At the same time, the JEP is also at the centre of public controversies surrounding the Colombian peace process and is facing a series of legal and political challenges in its daily work. In this sense, the JEP generates a continuous need for consultation, discussion and research. The articles in this volume aim to contribute to a better understanding of the JEP and to identify further necessary research avenues on this topic. At the same time, we hope to contribute to the still limited research on the Colombian peace process and the JEP in the English language.
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5

Freeman, Mark, and Ivan Orozco Abad. Negotiating Transitional Justice: First-Hand Lessons from Colombia. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations, 2020.

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6

Freeman, Mark, and Iván Orozco Abad. Negotiating Transitional Justice: First-Hand Lessons from Colombia. Cambridge University Press, 2019.

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7

Freeman, Mark, and Iván Orozco. Negotiating Transitional Justice: Firsthand Lessons from Colombia and Beyond. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations, 2019.

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8

Ambos, Kai, and Stefan Peters. Transitional Justice in Colombia: The Special Jurisdiction for Peace. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft, 2022.

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9

Freeman, Mark, and Iván Orozco. Negotiating Transitional Justice: Firsthand Lessons from Colombia and Beyond. Cambridge University Press, 2019.

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10

Aristas del conflicto colombiano (2014). Editorial Universidad del Rosario, 2014.

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11

Meernik, James, Jacqueline H. R. DeMeritt, and Mauricio Uribe-López. As War Ends: What Colombia Can Tell Us about the Sustainability of Peace and Transitional Justice. Cambridge University Press, 2019.

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12

DeMeritt, Jacqueline Hope Rubin, James David Meernik, and Mauricio Uribe López. As War Ends: What Colombia Can Tell Us about the Sustainability of Peace and Transitional Justice. Cambridge University Press, 2019.

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13

Meernik, James, Jacqueline H. R. DeMeritt, and Mauricio Uribe-López. As War Ends: What Colombia Can Tell Us about the Sustainability of Peace and Transitional Justice. Cambridge University Press, 2019.

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14

Meernik, James, Jacqueline H. R. DeMeritt, and Mauricio Uribe-López. As War Ends: What Colombia Can Tell Us about the Sustainability of Peace and Transitional Justice. Cambridge University Press, 2019.

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15

Justicia transicional y la realidad de los procesos de Paz en la construcción del nuevo orden social en Colombia - 1. edición. Universidad Libre. Facultad de Derecho, 2012.

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16

La gestión del testimonio y la administración de las víctimas : el escenario transicional en Colombia durante la Ley de Justicia y Paz. - 1. edición. Siglo del Hombre Editores, 2012.

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17

Prieto-Bustos, William Orlando, Johanna Manrique-Hernández, María Camila Jaramillo-Cruz, Marlén Cecilia Torres-Castiblanco, and María Alejandra Dueñas-Portes. Conflicto armado y desplazamiento forzado: un caso de migración forzada en Colombia. Edited by William Orlando Prieto-Bustos and Johanna Manrique-Hernández. Editorial Universidad Católica de Colombia, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.14718/9789585133907.2021.

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Colombia has the highest number of people displaced by violence in the world. According to the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHRC), in 2017, 7.7 million people were registered as being internally displaced. Forced migration as a result of displacement caused by armed conflict, in a context of weak protection of the rights of the victim population and low-income generation, represents a challenge for social development, which is limited by high levels of poverty and income concentration. In particular, the territorialisation of the peace agreements is currently still under construction with serious difficulties in the security systems of social leaders and in improving economic opportunities in both legal and formal ways to counteract the damaging effects of criminal economies that are associated with illegal mining and drug trafficking. The research, conducted from the forced migration approach, contributes to building strategies from different areas, mainly from the institutional and labour market, to reduce the obstacles to the reintegration of victims into civil society through a public policy built based on citizen participation. In this sense, governance processes with citizen participation are situated in security concepts that encompass the State’s obligation to offer better income opportunities in legal economies, of protection of human and democratic rights, and consolidation of transitional justice mechanisms, which are a priority in the advance toward sustainable peace.
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18

Brysk, Alison. The Right to Bodily Integrity. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190901516.003.0007.

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In Chapter 7, we profile the global pattern of sexual violence. We will consider conflict rape and transitional justice response in Peru and Colombia, along with the plight of women displaced by conflict from Syria and Central America, and limited international policy response. State-sponsored sexual violence and popular resistance to reclaim public space will be chronicled in Egypt as well as Mexico. We will track intensifying public sexual assault amid social crisis in Turkey, South Africa, and India, which has been met by a wide range of public protest, legal reform, and policy change. For a contrasting experience of the privatization of sexual assault in developed democracies, we will trace campus, workplace, and military rape in the United States.
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19

Linares Cantillo, Alejandro, Camilo Valdivieso-León, and Santiago García-Jaramillo, eds. Constitutionalism. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192896759.001.0001.

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This book is a compilation of twenty essays prepared for the occasion of the XIII Academic Conference of the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Colombia, held in Bogota in January of 2019. Gathering some of the most prominent authors in constitutionalism and legal theory, the chapters critically examine classical debates. These debates concern the role of judicial review in a democracy, the enforcement of socio-economic rights, the doctrine of unconstitutional amendments, the use of international and foreign precedents by national Courts, and the theory of transitional justice. The book opens a dialogue between philosophers and empirical researchers, building bridges between 'Global North' and 'Global South' approaches to constitutionalism. As such, it is an invitation to reengage with the classical debates on constitutionalism whilst also providing fresh insights into the future of this discipline.
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20

Meertens, Donny. Elusive Justice: Women, Land Rights, and Colombia's Transition to Peace. University of Wisconsin Press, 2019.

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21

Meertens, Donny. Elusive Justice: Women, Land Rights, and Colombia's Transition to Peace. University of Wisconsin Press, 2019.

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22

Stahn, Carsten, and Jens Iverson, eds. Just Peace After Conflict. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198823285.001.0001.

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The interplay between peace and justice plays an important role in almost any contemporary conflict. Peace and conflict studies have generally devoted more attention to conflict than to peace. Peace is often described in adjectives, such as negative/positive peace, liberal peace or democratic peace. But what elements make a peace just? Just war theory, peacebuilding, or transitional justice provide different perspectives on the dialectic relation between peace and justice and the methods of establishing peace after conflict. Experiences such as the Colombian peace process show that peace is increasingly judicialized. This volume analyses some of the situational, normative, and relational elements of peace in processes of transition. It explores six core themes: conceptual approaches towards just peace, macro-principles, the nexus to security and stability, protection of persons and public goods, rule of law and economic reform and accountability. It engages with understudied issues, such as the pros and cons of robust UN mandates, the link between environment protection and indigenous peoples, the treatment of illegal settlements, the feasibility of vetting practices or the protection labour rights in post-conflict economies. It argues that just peace requires only not negotiation, agreement and compromise (e.g., moderation), but contextual understandings of law, multiple dimensions of justice and strategies of prevention. It complements the two earlier volumes on the legal contours of jus post bellum, namely Just Post Bellum: Mapping the Normative Foundations (2014) and Environmental Protection and Transitions from Conflict to Peace: Clarifying Norms, Principles and Practices (2017).
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23

Brysk, Alison. Ending Impunity. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190901516.003.0008.

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Chapter 8 tracks the uses and shortfalls of law as a path to ending impunity, echoing the gap between public and private in architecture, access, and accountability. We will trace the evolution of legal standards for VAW in international law and tribunals on sexual violence, transitional justice in Guatemala, Croatia, and Libya, and national treatment of private abuse in India and the Philippines. This contrasts with the architecture challenges of legal pluralism incorporating multiple local codes in Lebanon, Argentina, Nigeria, and South Africa, as well as parallel status problems in emerging debates on marital rape in Malawi and the Mideast. Contests over state responsibility and pathways to accountability are highlighted in Turkey, Mexico, Brazil, and Kenya. Yet a range of barriers for access to justice persist in insecure and inequitable states, and are profiled in Colombia, South Africa, Mexico, and India—with some innovative response in the latter cases. We will affirm a rights-based reading of the power of law but refine a feminist critique of its limits by distinguishing the legal reform requisites for different genres of human rights abuse and different types of gender regimes.
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24

Manuel José Cepeda, Espinosa, and Landau David. Part Two Rights, 7 The Rights of Victims and Transitional Justice. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780190640361.003.0007.

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Because of the scope and duration of Colombia’s internal armed conflict, that conflict has produced much suffering in the civilian population. This chapter focuses on the Court’s jurisprudence protecting the rights of victims, especially of the internal armed conflict. In this area, the incorporation of international law has been particularly important. Drawing on this jurisprudence, the Court has insisted that victims be given rights to truth, justice, and reparations. The contours of this right have proven particularly important in processes in which the government has sought to give amnesties or sentence reductions in return for participation in the peace process by illegal armed groups, first with paramilitaries and now with guerrilla groups. In reviewing these frameworks, the Court has sought to create criteria that are flexible while retaining the core restrictions of international human rights law and international humanitarian law.
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25

Romero, Juan Pablo Aranguren. Managing Testimony and Administrating Victims: Colombia's Transitional Scenario under the Justice and Peace Act. Springer International Publishing AG, 2016.

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26

Romero, Juan Pablo Aranguren. Managing Testimony and Administrating Victims: Colombia's Transitional Scenario under the Justice and Peace Act. Palgrave Macmillan, 2016.

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27

Romero, Juan Pablo Aranguren. Managing Testimony and Administrating Victims: Colombia’s Transitional Scenario under the Justice and Peace Act. Palgrave Macmillan, 2018.

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28

Sripati, Vijayashri. Constitution-Making under UN Auspices. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199498024.001.0001.

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As an 18th century ‘standard of civilization,’ the Western liberal constitution has since been integral to public international law and colonial trusteeship. This book is the first comprehensive treatment of the ostensible purposes why international organizations have internationalized this Constitution: from the League of Nations in Danzig, to the UN starting from Libya in 1949, and from 1989-2018, in more than forty poor states including most recently in Colombia and The Gambia. This pioneering study sets the Constitution’s internationalization via United Nations Constitutional Assistance (UNCA) at centre-stage. The Constitution’s salience makes its post-1989 rise via UNCA the most significant post-Cold War development, one which has spawned and shaped all other legal and political developments. For example, the internationalization of this Constitution (subsumed under the ‘rule of law’ label) drives the famed post-1989 rule of law movement, shaping all sectors from electoral, judicial, security, and parliamentary to international criminal and transitional justice. This Constitution’s internationalization is traced, from France’s drafting of Turkey’s 1856 monetary laws, British lawyer, Travis Twiss’ drafting of Congo’s 1885 constitution to the constitutional assistance offered by the League of Nations during the inter-war period and from 1949, by its successor, the United Nations and through a combined historical international constitutional framework, UNCA’s legitimacy is appraised. Through this new constitutional history of trusteeship, Sripati demonstrates that creating an equitable order requires considering seriously why sovereign states’ constitution-making is being internationalized. The book concludes by arguing that UNCA continues its trusteeship role. UNCA makes a new fiscally oriented addition to the ‘standards of civilization’: ‘transparent, inclusive and participatory’ constitution-making.
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