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Civil Society and Transitional Justice in Asia and the Pacific
- First Page
- Preliminary pages
- Abbreviations
- Introduction: Civil society and transitional justice in Asia and the Pacific
- Part 1 – Timor-Leste and Indonesia
- 1. Rethinking ‘civil society’ and ‘victim-centred’ transitional justice in Timor-Leste
- 2. Justice within the National Imaginary: Civil society and societal transition in Timor‑Leste
- 3. The omnipresent past: Rethinking transitional justice through digital storytelling on Indonesia’s 1965 violence
- Part 2 – Cambodia and Myanmar
- 4. The evolution of Cambodian civil society’s involvement with victim participation at the Khmer Rouge trials
- 5. Showing now: The Bophana Audiovisual Resource Centre and the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia
- 6. Myanmar’s transition without justice
- Part 3 – The Pacific Islands
- 7. The role played by reconciliation in social reconstruction in Bougainville
- 8. Between kastom, church and commercialisation: Reconciliations on Bougainville as a form of ‘transitional justice’?
- 9. Vernacularising ‘child rights’ in Melanesian secondary schools: Implications for transitional justice
- 10. Mis-selling transitional justice: The confused role of faith-based actors and Christianity in Solomon Islands’ Truth and Reconciliation Commission
- Contributors
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