2017
DOI: 10.5204/ijcjsd.v6i1.378
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Punishment, Democracy and Transitional Justice in Argentina (1983-2015)

Abstract: Latin America has neither suffered the majority of mass atrocities in the contemporary world nor the worst of them but, after a sustained period of transition to democracy, it holds the record for the most domestic trials for human rights abuses. Argentina is an emblematic case in Latin America and the world. Due to the early development of its human rights trials, their social impact and their scale, it has a leading role in what is known as 'the justice cascade'. Until recently, leading scholars in sociology… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…As a result, since the 1980s, the most significant advancements in human rights and the most remarkable transitional processes worldwide happened in the Global South (mainly in Latin America but also in South Africa and Rwanda, among many others). 187 Our aim therefore is to break with a narrative that understands normative transfers as unidirectional processes that begin with empires and imperial legal projects, and insists that the Global South can (must?) learn from the experience of the Global North.…”
Section: Ruti Teitel and Valeria Vegh Weismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, since the 1980s, the most significant advancements in human rights and the most remarkable transitional processes worldwide happened in the Global South (mainly in Latin America but also in South Africa and Rwanda, among many others). 187 Our aim therefore is to break with a narrative that understands normative transfers as unidirectional processes that begin with empires and imperial legal projects, and insists that the Global South can (must?) learn from the experience of the Global North.…”
Section: Ruti Teitel and Valeria Vegh Weismentioning
confidence: 99%