9781780681849-1780681844-Law, Nation-Building & Transformation: The South African experience in perspective (15) (Series on Transitional Justice)

Law, Nation-Building & Transformation: The South African experience in perspective (15) (Series on Transitional Justice)

ISBN-13: 9781780681849
ISBN-10: 1780681844
Edition: First Edition
Author: Catherine Jenkins, Max Du Plessis
Publication date: 2014
Publisher: Intersentia
Format: Hardcover 334 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781780681849
ISBN-10: 1780681844
Edition: First Edition
Author: Catherine Jenkins, Max Du Plessis
Publication date: 2014
Publisher: Intersentia
Format: Hardcover 334 pages

Summary

Law, Nation-Building & Transformation: The South African experience in perspective (15) (Series on Transitional Justice) (ISBN-13: 9781780681849 and ISBN-10: 1780681844), written by authors Catherine Jenkins, Max Du Plessis, was published by Intersentia in 2014. With an overall rating of 3.8 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Law, Nation-Building & Transformation: The South African experience in perspective (15) (Series on Transitional Justice) (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

In this book, 15 contributors from the disciplines of law, politics, and sociology reflect on South Africa's transition to democracy and the challenges of transformation and nation-building that have confronted the country since the first democratic elections of 1994. The range of topics is expansive, in keeping with a broader-than-usual definition of transitional justice which, it is argued, is more appropriate for States faced with the mammoth tasks of reform and institution-building in a context in which democracy has never been firmly rooted and the existence of widespread poverty gives rise to the dual demands for both bread and freedom. In the case of South Africa, the post-apartheid era has been characterized by wide-ranging attempts at transformation and nation-building, from the well-known Truth and Reconciliation Commission to reforms in education and policing, the promotion of women's rights, the reform of land law, the provision of basic services to hundreds of thousands of poor households, a new framework for freedom of expression, and the transformation of the judiciary. In the light of South Africa's commitment to a new constitutional dispensation and to legal regulation, this volume focuses in particular, but not exclusively, on the role that law and lawyers have played in social and political change in South Africa in the post-apartheid era. It sets the South African experience in historical and comparative perspective and considers whether any lessons may be learned for the field of transitional justice. (Series: Transitional Justice - Vol. 15)

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