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      “Post-Conflict” Reconstruction, the Crimes of the Powerful and Transitional Justice

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            Abstract

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            Author and article information

            Journal
            10.13169
            statecrime
            State Crime Journal
            Pluto Journals
            20466056
            20466064
            1 April 2017
            : 6
            : 1
            : 4-12
            Affiliations
            [1 ] University of Melbourne
            [2 ] University of Ulster
            Article
            statecrime.6.1.0004
            10.13169/statecrime.6.1.0004
            4d933bd5-47d6-4666-98fb-1a24a3704cff
            © 2017 International State Crime Initiative

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            History
            Categories

            Criminology

            References

            1. , and ( 2014) “Rethinking Transitional Justice, Redressing Indigenous Harm: A New Conceptual Approach”, The International Journal of Transitional Justice 8( 2): 194– 216.

            2. and ( 2014) “Corruption in Post-conflict Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo: A Deal among Friends”, Third World Quarterly 35( 5): 855– 871.

            3. ( 2014) “Foregrounding Socio-economic Rights in Transitional Justice: Realising Justice for Violations of Economic and Social Rights”, Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights 32( 2): 183– 213.

            4. ( 2008) “Plunder and Pain: Should Transitional Justice Engage with Corruption and Economic Crimes?”, The International Journal of Transitional Justice 2( 3): 310– 330.

            5. ( 2002) “Transformative Justice: Charting a Path to Reconciliation”, International Legal Perspectives 12: 73– 183.

            6. ( 1969) “Violence, Peace, and Peace Research”, Journal of Peace Research 6( 3): 167– 191.

            7. ( 2008) “Corrupting or Consolidating the Peace? The Drugs Economy and Post-conflict Peacebuilding in Afghanistan”, International Peacekeeping 15( 3): 405– 423.

            8. and ( 2014) “From Transitional to Transformative Justice: A New Agenda for Practice”, The International Journal of Transitional Justice 8( 3): 339– 361.

            9. ( 2012) The Dynamics of Transitional Justice: International Models and Local Realities in East Timor . Abingdon: Routledge.

            10. ( 2008) The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism . New York: Picador.

            11. ( 2009) “Transitional Justice and Peacebuilding after Mass Violence”, The International Journal of Transitional Justice 3( 1): 28– 48.

            12. ( 2008) “Transitional Justice and Peace Building: Diagnosing and Addressing the Socioeconomic Roots of Violence through a Human Rights Framework”, International Journal of Transitional Justice 2: 331– 355.

            13. ( 2014) “The Fog of Peace: Post-conflict Environments as Sites of Impunity, Denial and Dispossession”, openDemocracy 17 December. Available online at https://www.opendemocracy.net/kristian-lasslett/fog-of-peace-postconflict-environments-as-sites-of-impunity-denial-and-dispossessi (accessed 5 April 2017).

            14. ( 2008) “Corrupting Peace? Peacebuilding and Post-conflict Corruption”, International Peacekeeping 15( 3): 344– 361.

            15. ( 2017) Disaster Capitalism: Making a Killing Out of Catastrophe . New York: Verso.

            16. ( 2002) Beyond Retribution: Seeking Justice in the Shadows of War . Cambridge: Polity Press.

            17. and , (eds) ( 2008) Transitional Justice from Below: Grassroots Activism and the Struggle for Change . Oxford: Hart Publishing.

            18. ( 2008) “Effects of Invisibility: In Search of the ‘Economic’ in Transitional Justice”, The International Journal of Transitional Justice 2( 3): 266– 291.

            19. ( 2008) “Transitional Justice as Global Project: Critical Reflections”, Third World Quarterly 29( 2): 275– 289.

            20. ( 2008) “A Deeper Justice: Economic and Social Justice as Transitional Justice in Nepal”, The International Journal of Transitional Justice 2( 3): 378– 397.

            21. ( 2011) “Towards Victim-Centred Transitional Justice: Understanding the Needs of Families of the Disappeared in Postconflict Nepal”, The International Journal of Transitional Justice 5( 1): 75– 98.

            22. ( 2015) “A Feminist Reconceptualisation of Intimate Partner Violence against Women”, Women's Studies International Forum 53(November–December): 31– 42.

            23. and ( 2014) “‘Do No Harm’? Exploring the Scope of Economic and Social Rights in Transitional Justice”, The International Journal of Transitional Justice 8( 3): 362– 382.

            24. ( 2012) “Addressing Economic Violence in Times of Transition: Toward a Positive-Peace Paradigm for Transitional Justice”, Fordham International Law Journal 35( 3): 780– 814.

            25. , (ed) ( 2014) Justice and Economic Violence in Transition . New York: Springer.

            26. ( 2015) “Not Only ‘Context’: Why Transitional Justice Programs Can No Longer Ignore Violations of Economic and Social Rights”, Texas International Law Journal 50( 2–3): 465– 494.

            27. ( 2007) “The Crimes of Neo-liberal Rule in Occupied Iraq”, British Journal of Criminology 47( 2): 177– 195.

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