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      Using restorative justice to rethink the temporality of transition in Chile

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          Using restorative justice to rethink the temporality of transition in Chile

          Assumptions of linear progress and a clean break with the past have long characterised transitional justice interventions. This notion of temporality has increasingly been problematised in transitional justice scholarship and practice. Scholars have argued that a more complex understanding of temporalities is needed that better accommodates the temporal messiness and complexity of transitions, including their ongoingness, multilayeredness and multidirectionality. Existing critiques, however, have not yet resulted in a new conceptual framework for thinking about transitional temporalities. This article builds on insights from the field of restorative justice to develop such a framework. This framework foregrounds longer timelines, multilayered temporalities and temporal ecologies to better reflect reality on the ground and victims’ lived experiences. We argue that restorative justice is a useful starting point to develop such a temporal framework because of its actor-oriented, flexible and interactive nature and proximity to the field of transitional justice. Throughout this article we use the case of Chile to illustrate some of the complex temporal dynamics of transition and to illustrate what a more context-sensitive temporal lens could mean for such cases of unfinished transition.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Marit de Haan is a PhD researcher at the Human Rights Centre of Ghent University, Belgium.
                Role: Tine Destrooper is Associate Professor of Transitional Justice at the Human Rights Centre of Ghent University, Belgium. Contact author: marit.dehaan@ugent.be.
                Journal
                TIJRJ
                The International Journal of Restorative Justice
                Eleven International Publishing (The Hague )
                2589-0891
                September 2021
                : 4
                : 2
                : 206-228 (pp. 206-228)
                Article
                TIJRJ-D-20-00054
                10.5553/TIJRJ.000078
                9b82c437-18ae-4dc7-a7a7-8651e8aee7a9
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                Criminology,Criminal law,General social science,Public law,Penology & Police science
                multilayeredness & multidirectionality,ongoingness,Chile,restorative justice,transitional justice,temporality

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