Projects

Transitional Justice

The NYU Program on Transitional Justice brings together teaching, research, conferences and student field work on criminal trials, truth commissions, institutional reform and reparations programs in transitional democracies, ranging from East Timor and Iraq to Sierra Leone and Peru.

Event

Philip Alston to speak at Human Rights and the Global Economy Conference

(November 9-10, 2011)

Location: John Tishman Auditorium, 66 West 12th Street, NYC

The Center for Public Scholarship presents the 25th conference from the Social Research journal at The New School. Join us as experts and scholars discuss human rights as a mediating language for discussions about social justice and the global economy. How does a wealthy nation determine what they can do to alleviate global poverty? What are the ethical obligations and how can such assistance be mutually beneficial? What are the human rights responsibilities and obligations of international financial institutions and corporations? Where are the opportunities in economic policies and institutions to strengthen human rights policies around the world and improve social justice?

Keynote on Wednesday, November 9, 2011 6:00pm: Olivier De Schutter, United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, will discuss the role of human rights in shaping international regimes

Full program and registration.

Featuring: Philip Alston, Christian Barry, Nehal Bhuta, Jackie Dugard, Sakiko Fukuda-Parr, Siri Gloppen, Kathryn Hochstetler, Robert Howse, Chris Jochnick, Andrew Lang, Asunción Lera St. Clair, Chris London, Sanjay Reddy, Margot Salomon, Galit A. Sarfaty, Meaghen Simms, and Miriam Ticktin

Tickets: Full conference: $30; single session $10 Nonprofit Members and Staff: $15; single sessions $5 Free for all students and all New School faculty, staff, and alumni (with valid ID)

Contact: cps@newschool.edu or 917-534-9330

International Symposium on Restorative Justice, Reconciliation and Peacebuilding

(November 11-12, 2011)

Location: Lipton Hall, D'Agostino Hall, 108 West Third Street, New York, NY

Friday, November 11, 8:30am-4:30pm

Saturday, November 12, 9:00am-3:30pm

All over the world controversies continue to beset the practice of peacebuilding. Peace versus justice. Religious versus secular. Individual versus structural justice. Forgiveness versus retribution. Overcoming these dilemmas requires more than reforming institutions but rather new thinking about the questions: what is justice? how is it related to the building of peace?

Answers to these questions lie in the twin concepts of reconciliation and restorative justice. The symposium explores their potential for overcoming the familiar controversies and offering guidance for peacebuilding. It will explore as well what these concepts have to say about punishment, accountability, apology, forgiveness, confession, truth telling, human rights, international law, and other issues and practices. Participation is open to students, scholars, and practitioners interested in transitional justice and peacebuilding.Learn more and RSVP here

TJ Nov 14

"Justice and Development: Nexus at the Heart of Arab Spring”: The Annual Emilio Mignone Lecture on Transitional Justice, featuring Helen Clark and Hossam Bahgat

(November 14, 2011)

Tishman Auditorium, Vanderbilt Hall, NYU School of Law

6:00pm-7:30pm

The International Center for Transitional Justice and the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU School of Law are pleased to invite you to attend The Sixth Annual Emilio Mignone Lecture on Transitional Justice. This year's lecture--"Justice and Development: Nexus at the Heart of Arab Spring"--will feature a discussion between Helen Clark (UNDP) and Hossam Bahgat (Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights). The event will be introduced and moderated by Philip Alston (CHRGJ and NYU School of Law).

About the event: Thiis annual public lecture invites leading international figures to explore cutting edge issues in transitional justice. The focus of this year’s lecture will be on the nexus between transitional justice and development, followed by a conversation about how these relate to the recent and ongoing transitions in the Middle East and North Africa.

Valid ID required for admission. Please RSVP to Audrey Watne at watnea@exchange.law.nyu.edu.

The Center’s Transitional Justice Program Director is Paul van Zyl, who was the Executive Secretary of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission and is the Program Director of the International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ). The NYU Program benefits from the ongoing support and contributions of Dr. Alex Boraine, who served as Deputy Chair of South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission. A founder of the ICTJ, he is now its Board’s Chairperson and was a member of the 2005-06 Global Law Faculty at NYU School of Law.

The Center and its staff have undertaken a number of projects in this area:

  • Our Transitional Justice Program Director covers the transitional justice field through two seminar courses which examine both the conceptual underpinnings of this field and case studies of particular transitional societies.
  • All LL.M. applicants have the opportunity to apply for a program that will enable them to focus their studies on the issues surrounding transitional justice: the Transitional Justice Scholars Program. Transitional Justice Scholars are guaranteed enrollment in the two courses that comprise the classroom component of the Project. This rigorous academic exercise will be complemented with the opportunity to undertake internships during the academic year. As an additional benefit, upon completion of the LL.M. degree, scholars will receive unpaid internship placement assistance with a variety of transitional justice institutions.
  • The ICTJ, in partnership with NYU School of Law, offers the Transitional Justice Essentials Course, New York: a 3-day intensive, non-credit course on transitional justice. The primary instructor for the course is Paul van Zyl. The course covers the essential themes, mechanisms, and case studies in the field of transitional justice. It focuses on a range of topics including prosecution mechanisms, truth commissions, reparations programs, vetting mechanisms, and reconciliation initiatives. It also explores the intersection between efforts to achieve justice and accountability, and negotiations to ensure sustainable peace. The course aims to equip busy professionals with the knowledge required to conceive and implement transitional justice policies and programs that are in line with international best practices. The program is primarily targeted at mid-level and senior staff of multilateral agencies, governments, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), foundations, and universities who wish to undertake an intensive course on cutting-edge developments in this important and expanding field. The first course was held at NYU School of Law from June 21 - 23, 2006.
  • The Center offers a comprehensive range of transitional justice fellowships, which enable students to undertake research and fieldwork on criminal trials, truth commissions, institutional reform and reparations programs in transitional democracies.
  • The Center has enriched the field of transitional justice by exploring new ways to address the dilemma of how to deal with past human rights violations. A number of the papers included in our Working Papers series, many of which were written by Center members and former students, address evolving transitional justice issues, such as the question of restitution and memory and returning refugees.
  • In collaboration with the ICTJ, the Center hosts the CHRGJ Annual Transitional Justice Lecture, which provides a prominent platform for distinguished persons working on transitional justice issues to deliver a scholarly paper on important developments in the field. On November 18, 2004, Prof. José Zalaquett delivered the inaugural Annual Lecture on Transitional Justice on the topic The Ethics of Democratic Reconstruction: Truth and Justice in the Wake of Dictatorship and Armed Conflict (1984-2004). Zalaquett is currently President of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Professor of Human Rights at the University of Chile and Co-Director of its Human Rights Center, and served as a member of Chile’s National Commission on Truth and Reconciliation.
  • In 2006, the CHRGJ Annual Transitional Justice Lecture featured the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, Ms. Louise Arbour.