Description
Book SynopsisContributes theoretically and practically to the growing field of transitional justice
Trade ReviewNegative Emotions and Transitional Justice connects the threads between previously unrelated clusters of theory on justice, emotions, judgment, and democracy, bringing a new theoretical sophistication to the field of transitional justice studies. -- Thomas Brudholm, University of Copenhagen Mihaela Mhiai skillfully maps the contours of the debate about the role domestic and international courts-and particularly judges-should or should not play in the development of democratic institutions in post-conflict societies. She argues convincingly that, if done correctly, courts can help balance the twin imperative of recognizing past harms and promoting a culture of respect for the rights of others. This is an important, thought-provoking book on an inordinately complex subject. -- Eric Stover, University of California, Berkeley Mihai constructs an extraordinarily clear map of the boundaries of legitimate resentment and indignation against prior injustice and then shows how judicial decisions can be exemplary in demonstrating the right roles for these fitting but volatile emotions within a democratic order. -- Margaret Urban Walker, Marquette University In the best tradition of political philosophy, Mihai stands on the shoulders of such giants as Hannah Arendt, Ronald Dworkin, and Judith Shklar to think through pressing contemporary normative and institutional questions about the nature, conditions, and practices of judgment as one of the pillars of democratic consolidation. Then, intelligently drawing on both new scholarship on the emotions and contemporary cases of transitional justice, she reaches beyond those thinkers to consider how democratizing societies can respond to and draw on the ethical judgments that such negative emotions carry, at the same time as performing and consolidating the principles of a society that treats all as equals. Tempering her vision of what might be possible with the realism of institutional, political, and cultural constraints, Mihai has achieved an original and important contribution to both theories and practices of transitional justice. -- Danielle Celermajer, University of Sydney Mihai's meticulous argumentation style sets this book apart among accounts of emotional responses to past abuses. Perspectives on Politics
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Introduction: The Problem 1. Transitional Justice: Optional or Imperative? 2. Theorizing Resentment and Indignation 3. Enabling Emotional Responsibility I: Judicial Review of Transitional Justice Legislation 4. Enabling Emotional Responsibility II: Criminal Trials in Democratic Transitions Conclusions Notes Bibliography Index