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Geographies of Crime and Justice: Contemporary Transitional Justice and the Creation of 'Zones of Impunity'
Authors:Sriram, Chandra Lekha   Ross, Amy
Affiliation:* Chair in Human Rights and Director of the Centre on Human Rights in Conflict, School of Law, University of East London
"{dagger}" Assistant Professor, Department of Geography, University of Georgia
Abstract:This article explores some of the challenges that transnationalcrimes pose to the operation of transnational justice. By transnationalcrimes, we mean serious violations of international human rightsand humanitarian law that transcend national borders and areperpetrated by state or non-state actors. Many national andinternational legal mechanisms may only address a segment ofthese crimes, creating what we refer to as ‘zones of impunity.’This article examines how these dilemmas are unfolding in threeAfrican contexts: the possibility that Charles Taylor is triedfor crimes in Sierra Leone but not in Liberia; that only Congolese,and not Rwandans or Ugandans, face prosecution for crimes inIturi or elsewhere in the Democratic Republic of Congo; or thatJoseph Kony escapes prosecution in Uganda through being allowedamnesty or exile in Sudan. Our analytic framework considershow geography and politics affect legal responses to transnationalcrimes.
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