Law in transition: human rights, development and transitional justice
In: Osgoode readers volume 3
Global poverty and the politics of good intentions /Sundhya Pahuja --Human rights and development : a fragmented discourse /Issa G. Shivji --Rights and development : a social power perspective /Ananya Mukherjee-Reed --Is a new 'TREMF' human rights paradigm emerging? Evidence from Nigeria /Obiora Chinedu Okafor --The transformation of Africa : a critique of rights in transitional justice /Makau W. Mutua --Marks indicating conditions of origin in rights-based sustainable development /Nicole Aylwin and Rosemary J. Coombe --Rethinking the convergence of human rights and labour rights in international law : depoliticisation and excess /Vidya Kumar --Measuring the world : indicators, human rights and global governance /Sally Engle Merry --Governing by measuring : the millenium development goals in global governance /Kerry Rittich --Reparations and development /Naomi Roht-Arriaza --Making history or making peace : when prosecutions should give way to truth commissions and peace negotiations /Martha Minow --Transitional justice as global project : critical reflections /Rosemary Nagy --Holding up a mirror to the process of transition? The coercive sterilisation of Romani women in the Czech Republic post-1991 /Morag Goodwin --Symptoms of sovereignty? Apologies, indigenous rights and reconciliation in Australia and Canada /Kirsten Anker --Working through 'bitter experiences' towards a purified European identity? A critique of the disregard for history in European constitutional theory and practice /Christian Joerges --The trials of history : losing justice in the monstrous and the banal /Vasuki Nesiah --Sociological jurisprudence 2.0 : updating law's inter-disciplinarity in a global context /Peer Zumbansen --Epilogue:Progressive law versus the critique of law & development : strategies of double agency revisited /Bryant G. Garth.