18.97.14.85
18.97.14.85
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Accredited SCOPUS
Transitions without Transitional Justice in Asia
( Sung Chull Kim )
DOI 10.18588/202011.00a087
UCI I410-ECN-0102-2021-300-000105374

This article addresses the underexplored question of why some state violence cases in Asia are not followed by transitional justice even during a democratic transition. It explicates the two factors that obstruct or delay seeking truth and accountability and thus bring impunity for perpetrators. One is the context in which the violence took place, and the other is longevity of the violent regime. If the violence occurs during a period of conflation of state construction and regime building, and if the perpetrators’ power persists long enough to be institutionalized, transitional justice is least likely to take place. Five cases of violence violence which were committed by anticommunist regimes during the Cold War in four Asian countries are explored.

Introduction
Conceptual Question: Why Do Democratic Transitions Pass by Past Violence?
Conflation of State Construction and Regime Building
Longevity of the Violent Regime
Five Cases in Asia
Acknowledgments
References
[자료제공 : 네이버학술정보]
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