Books and Reports
·
Coming Home: Understanding why Commanders of the Lord’s Resistance
Army Choose to Return to a Civilian Life
(Conciliation Resources and Quaker Peace and Social Witness, 2006)
·
Nalepa, Monika, Skeletons in
the Closet: Transitional Justice in Post-Communist Europe (New
York: Cambridge University Press, 2010)
·
Olsen, Tricia D., Leigh A. Payne and Andrew G. Reiter,
Transitional Justice in Balance: Comparing Processes, Weighing
Efficacy
(Washington DC: United States Institute of Peace Press, forthcoming,
June 10, 2010)
·
Pham, Phuong, and others,
Forgotten
Voices: A Population-Based Survey on Attitudes about Peace and
Justice in Northern Uganda (ICTJ and Human Rights Center,
University of California Berkeley, 2005)
·
Pham, Phuong, and others,
So We Will Never Forget: A Population-Based Survey on Attitudes
about Social Reconstruction and the Extraordinary Chambers of the
Courts of Cambodia (Human Rights Center, University of
California Berkeley, 2009)
·
Samset, Ingrid, Stina Petersen and Vibeke Wang,
Maintaining the Process: Aid to Transitional Justice in Rwanda and
Guatemala, 1995-2005 (Bonn, Working Group on Development and
Peace, 2007)
· Vinck, Patrick, and others, Living with Fear: A Population-Based Survey on Attitudes about Peace, Justice and Social Reconstruction in Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (Human Rights Center, University of California Berkeley, Payson Center and ICTJ, 2008)
Articles
·
Lie, Tove Grete, Helga Malmin Binningsbø, and Scott Gates,
‘Post-Conflict Justice and Sustainable Peace’,
World Bank Policy Research
Working Papers, (2007)
·
Olsen, Tricia D., Leigh A. Payne and Andrew G. Reiter, ‘The Justice
Balance: When Transitional Justice Improves Human Rights and
Democracy’,
Human Rights
Quarterly, (forthcoming November 2010)
·
Pham, Phuong and Patrick Vinck, ‘Empirical Research and the
Development and Assessment of Transitional Justice Mechanisms’
International Journal of
Transitional Justice, 1.2 (2007), 231-248
·
Thoms, Oskar, James Ron and Roland Paris,
‘Does Transitional Justice Work? Perspectives from Empirical Social
Science’ SSRN Working
Paper, (2008)


