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Abstract

Most studies of truth commissions assert their positive role in improving human rights. A first wave of research made these claims based on qualitative analysis of a single truth commission or a small number of cases. Thirty years of experience with truth commissions and dozens of examples allow cross-national statistical studies to assess these findings. Two recent studies undertake that project. Their findings, which are summarized in this article, challenge the prevailing view that truth commissions foster human rights, showing instead that commissions, when used alone, tend to have a negative impact on human rights. Truth commissions have a positive impact, however, when used in combination with trials and amnesties. This article extends the question of whether truth commissions improve human rights to how, when and why they succeed or fail in doing so. It presents a ‘justice balance’ explanation, whereby commissions, incapable of promoting stability and accountability on their own, contribute to human rights improvements when they complement and enhance amnesties and prosecutions. The article draws on experiences in Brazil, Chile, Nepal, South Korea and South Africa to illustrate the central argument.
The International Journal of Transitional Justice, Vol. 4, 2010, 457–476,
doi: 10.1093/ijtj/ijq021
When Truth Commissions Improve
Human Rights
Tricia D. Olsen,Leigh A. Payne,Andrew G. Reiter∗∗ and
Eric Wiebelhaus-Brahm
Abstract
Most studies of truth commissions assert their positive role in improving human rights. A
first wave of research made these claims based on qualitative analysis of a single truth com-
mission or a small number of cases. Thirty years of experience with truth commissions and
dozens of examples allow cross-national statistical studies to assess these findings. Two
recent studies undertake that project. Their findings, which are summarized in this arti-
cle, challenge the prevailing view that truth commissions foster human rights, showing
instead that commissions, when used alone, tend to have a negative impact on human
rights. Truth commissions have a positive impact, however, when used in combination
with trials and amnesties. This article extends the question of whether truth commissions
improve human rights to how, when and why they succeed or fail in doing so. It presents a
‘justice balance’ explanation, whereby commissions, incapable of promoting stability and
accountability on their own, contribute to human rights improvements when they com-
plement and enhance amnesties and prosecutions. The article draws on experiences in
Brazil, Chile, Nepal, South Korea and South Africa to illustrate the central argument.
Introduction
Do truth commissions promote improvements in human rights? Such a goal
is integral to truth commissions’ existence. The very process of uncovering the
violent past aims to prevent its reoccurrence. The words ‘never again,’ which have
become so closely connected to truth commissions, call for establishing human
rights protections to avoid future state terror, torture, disappearances and political
killings.1
With 30 years of experience and over twodozen examples to draw on, researchers
are now in a position to assess truth commissions’ success in achieving their human
PhD candidate, Department of Political Science, University of Wisconsin–Madison, USA. Email:
tdolsen@wisc.edu
Professor, Sociology and Latin American Studies, University of Oxford, UK. Email: leigh.
payne@sant.ox.ac.uk
∗∗ PhD candidate, Department of Political Science, University of Wisconsin–Madison, USA. Email:
areiter@wisc.edu
Senior Research Fellow, International Human Rights Law Institute, DePaul University, USA. Email:
eric.brahm@gmail.com
1Nunca M ´
as (Never Again) was the title of one of the world’s first truth commission reports, by
Argentina’s National Commission on the Disappeared (1984).
CThe Author (2010). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
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458 T. D. Olsen et al.
rights goals.2Transitional justice scholars and practitioners have tended to reach
positive conclusions regarding commissions’ capacity to establish responsibility for
past human rights violations and to encourage reforms that promote human rights.
They attribute this success largely to the commissions’ ability to avoid the political
and moral risks associated with prosecution or amnesty. Former perpetrators seem
unlikely to mobilize against nonprosecutorial mechanisms of accountability, which
thus establish responsibility without jeopardizing political stability.3In addition,
the collective responsibility acknowledged by truth commissions may heighten
awareness in a society of past atrocity, contributing to deterrence of future viola-
tions. Scholars and practitioners tend to view truth commissions as a pragmatic
middle road between prosecutions and impunity, instability and accountability.4
Researchers have thus viewed truth commissions as effective in dealing with past
human rights violations, while also achieving vic tim-centered (for example, official
acknowledgment) and societal (for example, reconciliation) goals.
This article challenges the first of these claims. Our research – which brings
together a study conducted by Tricia Olsen, Leigh Payne and Andrew Reiter based
on the Transitional Justice Data Base (TJDB) project and a study on truth com-
missions done by Eric Wiebelhaus-Brahm – contends that truth commissions, on
their own, tend to have a negative impact on human rights.5Commissions’ posi-
tive role in improving human rights depends instead on their being accompanied
by trials and amnesties. The article summarizes these findings and explores po-
tential explanations for them. It further offers insights into the conditions under
which truth commissions contribute positively to human rights. As such, it extends
the question of whether truth commissions improve human rights to how, when
and why they succeed in doing so. We conclude that truth commissions, when
used in concert with trials and amnesties, can help provide a ‘justice balance’ that
contributes to human rights improvements.
2There is some disagreement on whether the first truth commission occurred in Uganda in 1974 or
in Bolivia in 1982. For a discussion of definitional issues with respect to truth commissions, see,
Eric Brahm, ‘What Is a Truth Commission and Why Does It Matter?’ Peace and Conflict Review
3(2) (2009): 1–14.
3Jaime Malamud-Goti, ‘Trying Violators of Human Rights: The Dilemma of Transitional Govern-
ments,’ in State Crimes: Punishment or Pardon (Queenstown, MD: Aspen Institute, 1989); Jamie
Malamud-Goti, ‘Transitional Governments in the Breach: Why Punish State Criminals?’ Human
Rights Quarterly 12(1) (1990): 1–16; Aryeh Neier, ‘What Should Be Done about the Guilty?’ New
Yo rk Re v i e w of Bo o k s , 1 February 1990, 32–35; Carlos S. Nino, ‘The Duty to Punish Past Abuses
of Human Rights Put into Context: The Case of Argentina,’ Ya l e L aw Jo u r n a l 100(8) (1991):
2619–2640; Carlos S. Nino, Radical Evil on Trial (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1996).
4Neil J. Kritz, ‘Coming to Terms with Atrocities: A Review of Accountability Mechanisms for Mass
Violations of Human Rights,’ Law and Contemporary Problems 59(4) (1996): 127–152; Martha
Minow, Between Vengeanceand Forgiveness: Facing History after Genocide and Mass Violence (Boston,
MA: Beacon Press, 1998); Ruti Teitel, ‘How Are the New Democracies of the Southern Cone Dealing
with the Legacy of Past Human Rights Abuses?’ in Transitional Justice: How Emerging Democracies
Reckon with Former Regimes, ed. Neil J. Kritz (Washington, DC: US Institute of Peace Press,
1995).
5Tricia D. Olsen, Leigh A. Payne and Andrew G. Reiter, Transitional Justice in Balance: Comparing
Processes, Weighing Efficacy (Washington, DC: US Institute of Peace Press, 2010); Eric Wiebelhaus-
Brahm, Truth Commissions and Transitional Societies: The Impact on Human Rights and Democracy
(New York: Routledge, 2009).
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When Truth Commissions Improve Human Rights 459
Truth Commissions and Human Rights Goals
A broad range of goals has been attributed to truth commissions. Among them,
most scholars recognize human rights improvements as central.6For example,
in her seminal study of truth commissions, Priscilla Hayner argues that their
overarching goal is ‘to prevent further violence and human rights abuses in the
future.’7Human rights also figure prominently among Audrey Chapman’s 13 truth
commission aims, which include that they ‘end and prevent violence and future
human rights abuses,’ ‘forge the basis for a democratic political order that respects
and protects human rights’ and ‘recommend ways to deter future violations and
atrocities.’8Tristan Anne Borer similarly outlines 26 truth commission goals that
include ‘accountability,’ ‘human rights culture,’ ‘nunca m´
as’ (never again) and ‘rule
of law.’9Finally, Timothy Garton Ash asks, ‘By what criterion is [a truth commis-
sion’s] “success” to be judged, in the first place? Is it Truth? Justice? Reconciliation?
Closure? Healing? National Unity? Prevention of future abuses?’10
Only rarely do transitional justice scholars question this set of goals. David
Mendeloff, for example, doubts that human rights improvements represent an
appropriate measure of truth commissions’ success.11 Others recognize commis-
sions’ human rights goals but may not always consider them more important than
other objectives, such as individual victim and survivor healing. Despite these ex-
ceptions, significant widespread agreement exists that truth commissions can and
should advance human rights. Their role in bringing human rights improvements,
therefore, provides a legitimate measure of success and impact.
Existing studies also outline how truth commissions potentially fulfill the goal
of promoting human rights. Ideally, commissions include a broad rather than a
circumscribed mandate; sufficient powers and resources; widely respected and un-
biased commissioners; easy public access to commission findings; and recommen-
dations that are implemented by the government.12 Public access to a commission’s
6See, for example, Jason S. Abrams and Priscilla B. Hayner, ‘Documenting, Acknowledging and
Publicizing the Truth,’ in Post-ConflictJustice, ed. by M. Cherif Bassiouni (Ardsley, NY:Transnational
Publishers, 2002); David Gairdner, Truth in Transition: The Role of Truth Commissions in Political
Transition in Chile and El Salvador (Bergen: Chr. Michelsen Institute,1999); Mike Kaye, ‘The Role of
Truth Commissions in the Search for Justice, Reconciliation and Democratisation: The Salvadorean
and Honduran Cases,’ Journal of Latin American Studies 29(3) (1997): 693–716; Minow, supra n 4.
7Priscil la B. Hayner, Unspeakable Truths: Confronting State Terror and Atrocity (New York: Routledge,
2001), 154.
8Audrey R. Chapman, ‘Truth Finding in the Transitional Justice Process,’ in Assessing the Impact of
Transitional Justice: Challenges for Empirical Research, ed. Hugo van der Merwe, Victoria Baxter and
Audrey R. Chapman (Washington, DC: US Institute of Peace Press, 2009), 94.
9Tristan Anne Borer, ‘Truth Telling as a Peace-Building Activity: A Theoretical Overview,’ in Tel l ing
the Truths: Truth Telling and Peace Building in Post-Conflict Societies, ed. Tristan Anne Borer (Notre
Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2006), 26.
10 Timothy Garton Ash, ‘Truth Confessions,’ New York Review of Books, 17 July 1997, 36.
11 David Mendeloff, ‘Truth-Seeking, Truth-Telling, and Postconflict Peacebuilding: Curb the
Enthusiasm?’ International Studies Review 6(3) (2004): 355–380.
12 Mark Freeman and Priscilla B. Hayner, ‘Truth-Telling,’ in Reconciliation after Violent Conflict: A
Handbook, ed. David Bloomfield, Teresa Barnes and Luc Huyse (Stockholm: International Institute
for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, 2003); Priscilla B. Hayner, ‘Fifteen Truth Commissions –
1974 to 1994: A Comparative Study,’ Human Rights Quarterly 16(4) (1994): 597–655. See also,
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460 T. D. Olsen et al.
hearings and reports ‘narrows the range of permissible lies,’ as Michael Ignatieff
contends.13 Denial of abuse by perpetrators, their supporters and bystanders yields
to official acknowledgment of victims’ accounts. A commission’s subpoena power
and mandate may compel or entice perpetrators to confess to past violence. In
so doing, perpetrators subject their past violence to public scrutiny. Even their
former supporters may begin to question perpetrators’ heroic, patriotic or na-
tional salvation justifications for documented heinous acts.14 Ahighlyrespected
truth commission may thus succeed in establishing those acts as morally repre-
hensible and criminal. Legitimate, well-funded and sophisticated investigations
may lead to the implementation of a commission’s recommendations. Permanent
human rights investigative bodies, prosecution of human rights violations, human
rights laws and other legal and institutional reforms emerging from these rec-
ommendations may deter future crimes. Truth commissions, in short, potentially
promote human rights goals through official acknowledgment, accountability and
a normative, legal and institutional shift toward human rights protections.
Several studies of truth commissions find they have successfully promoted hu-
man rights goals. Jason Abrams and Priscilla Hayner contend ‘that [truth] com-
missions – even those operating in the most tense environments – have almost
invariably improved, and not worsened, the human rights climate.’15 Systematic
analyses of individual truth commissions further support this contention. James
Gibson, for example, tests the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commis-
sion’s (TRC) ability to promote a human rights culture by probing respondents
views on human rights principles, including the rule of law and legal universalism.16
He finds that those who accepted the TRC’s conclusions regarding South Africa’s
past proved more supportive of human rights than those who did not.
Richard J. Goldstone, ‘Justice as a Tool for Peace-Making: Truth Commissions and International
Criminal Tribunals,’ New York University Journal of International Law and Politics 28(3) (1996):
485–503; Aryeh Neier, War Crimes: Brutality, Genocide, Terror, and the Struggle for Justice (New
York: Times Books, 1998); Tina Rosenberg, The Haunted Land: Facing Europe’s Ghosts after Com-
munism (New York: Random House, 1995); Lawrence Weschler, A Miracle, a Universe: Settling
Accounts with Torturers (New York: Pantheon, 1990); Jos ´
e Zalaquett, ‘Balancing Ethical Imperatives
and Political Constraints: The Dilemma of New Democracies Confronting Past Human Rights
Violations,’ Hastings Law Journal 43(6) (1993): 1425–1438; Jos´
e Zalaquett, ‘Confronting Human
Rights Violations Committed by Former Governments: Principles Applicable and Political Con-
straints,’ Hamline Law Re view 13(3) (1990): 623–660; Martha Minow, ‘The Hope for Healing:
What Can Truth Commissions Do?’ in Truth v. Justice: The Morality of Truth Commissions,ed.
Robert I. Rotberg and Dennis Thompson (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2000); Rajeev
Bhargava, ‘Restoring Decency to Barbaric Societies,’ in Truth v. Justice: The Morality of Truth Com-
missions, ed. Robert I. Rotberg and Dennis Thompson (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press,
2000).
13 Michael Ignatieff, The Warrior’s Honor: Ethnic War and the Modern Conscience (New York: Henry
Holt and Co., 1997), 174.
14 Leigh A. Payne, Unsettling Accounts: Neither Truth nor Reconciliation in Confessions of State Violence
(Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2008).
15 Abrams and Hayner, supra n 6 at 292.
16 James L. Gibson, ‘Truth, Reconciliation, and the Creation of a Human Rights Culture in South
Africa,’ Law and Society Review 38(1) (2004): 5–40; James L. Gibson, Overcoming Apartheid: Can
Truth Reconcile a Divided Nation? (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2004).
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When Truth Commissions Improve Human Rights 461
Several comparative studies reach similar conclusions. Qualitative studies of
Latin American truth commissions have been most prevalent. For example, Mark
Ensalaco concludes that the Chilean and Salvadoran truth commissions advanced
human rights through their recommendations. These commissions called for an
official review of the legal system and ratification of international human rights
treaties.17 Mike Kaye’s subsequent study found that the Salvadoran Commission on
the Truth’s recommendations improved the protection of human rights and bol-
stered the human rights ombudsman.18 Most recently, Hunjoon Kim and Kathryn
Sikkink’s global, cross-national study concludes that truth commissions have had
a positive impact on human rights protection.19 The study assesses the effect on
human rights of trials and truth commissions adopted by democracies emerging
from authoritarian rule after 1974.
Kim and Sikkink join others in advancing three main explanations for truth
commissions’ success in relation to human rights improvements: deterrence, ac-
countability and norm promotion.20 They argue that commissions ‘outline the
weaknesses in the institutional structures or existing laws that should be changed
to prevent abuses from reoccurring in the future.’21 Moreover, commissions ‘pro-
mote the accountability of perpetrators of human rights violations,’ thereby un-
dermining cultures of impunity.22 In addition, they ‘legitimize the culture, beliefs
and values associated with human rights as the new framework for imagining so-
cial relations,’ and consequently strengthen societal norms against human rights
violations.23
While existing single-case, regional and cross-national studies find that truth
commissions have a positive impact on human rights protection, they present
some methodological concerns. For example, single-case studies often lack com-
parative data on human rights from prior to the truth commission. Gibson con-
structs a thoughtful survey instrument and employs sophisticated statistical tech-
niques, but the lack of pre-TRC data undermines the causal argument. Ensalaco’s
and Kaye’s regional studies focus on recommendations. While recommendations
are important, no guarantee exists that governments will implement them or
that the recommendations will succeed in influencing the behavior of the mil-
itary, police and judiciary, among others. Indeed, one study contends that only
moderately democratic countries and, by extension, human rights protectors are
17 Mark Ensalaco, ‘Truth Commissions for Chile and El Salvador: A Report and Assessment,’ Human
Rights Quarterly 16(4) (1994): 656–675.
18 Kaye,supran6.
19 Hunjoon Kim and Kathryn Sikkink, ‘Explaining the Deterrence Effect of Human Rights Prosecu-
tions for Transitional Countries,’ International Studies Quarterly (forthcoming). See also, Kathryn
Sikkink and Carrie Booth Walling, ‘The Impact of Human Rights Trials in Latin America,’ Journal
of Peace Research 44(4) (2007): 427–445.
20 Eric Wiebelhaus-Brahm suggests these as three ways of operationalizing human rights to measure
truth commission impact.
21 Hayner, supra n 7 at 29.
22 Freeman and Hayner, supra n 12 at 125.
23 Gairdner, supra n 6 at 54.
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462 T. D. Olsen et al.
likely to implement truth commission recommendations.24 Kim and Sikkink’s
sophisticated cross-national statistical analysis finds a positive relationship be-
tween truth commissions and human rights.25 Their model, however, does not
allow them to examine country cases in which truth commissions occurred alone
and without trials or in which truth commissions accompany amnesties with or
without trials.26 We do so in our studies and draw very different conclusions, as
we explain further below.
In sum, existing studies tend to agree that truth commissions aim to improve
human rights and often succeed in doing so. Our findings challenge these claims.
Rather than join scholars and practitioners who promote truth commissions for
their positive impact on human rights, therefore, we advocate caution. Our studies
demonstrate the limitations of commissions in achieving human rights goals.
Challenges to Existing Assumptions
In her book on truth commissions, Hayner raises a particular concern:
Many comfortable assumptions havebeen restated over and again in untested assertions
by otherwise astute and careful writers, thinkers, and political leaders ... Some of the
most oft-repeated statements, and those that we perhaps most wish to be true, are due
careful scrutiny.27
The relationship between truth commissions and human rights is one such area.
Despite the conventional wisdom that truth commissions promote human rights,
our research challenges that view. Specifically, we find that truth commissions
likely have a negative impact on human rights when used alone. Their positive
impacts depends on their being linked to trials and amnesties. After summarizing
the findings of our two studies and the challenges they pose to existing perspectives,
we present a ‘justice balance’ theory to explain our results.
To analyze the effect of transitional justice on human rights outcomes, Olsen et al.
used Keesing’s World News Archive to collect data on three main mechanisms –
trials, truth commissions and amnesties – adopted in all transitions from au-
thoritarianism to democracy between 1970 and 2004.28 Using Polity IV’s Regime
24 Alexandra Barahona de Brito, Carmen Gonz´
alez-Enr´
ıquez and Paloma Aguilar, eds., The Politics of
Memory: Transitional Justice in Democratizing Societies (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001).
25 In only one model is the relationship statistically significant at the typical social science confidence
level of 95%. In other words, one could conclude from most of their models that there is, in fact,
no relationship between truth commissions and human rights.
26 Note that while Kim and Sikkink’s operationalization of truth commissions follows that of Olsen
et al., their measurement of trials is quite different. They measure ‘trial years’ and ‘cumulative
trials years,’ both of which are derived from US State Department reports. They refer to a range of
prosecutorial activities as ‘trials,’ rather than focusing only on verdicts. In addition, they utilize dif-
ferent model specifications and include two additional controls (treaty ratification and population
change) not present in either Olsen et al. or Wiebelhaus-Brahm.
27 Hayner,supran7at6.
28 The full TJDB project includes data on five transitional justice mechanisms – trials, truth commis-
sions, amnesties, reparations and lustration – for all countries in the world from 1970 to 2007. For
more information on mechanism selection, concept formation and operationalization, as well as
data collection, see, Olsen, Payne and Reiter, supra n 5.
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When Truth Commissions Improve Human Rights 463
Tab l e 1. Effect of Transitional Justice on Human Rights
TJ Only Only Only Trials & Amnesties & Trials & Trials, TCs &
Overall Trials Amnesty TC Amnesties TCs TCs Amnesties
Physical Integrity +0 N/A – N/A N/A N/A 0
Political Terror Scale +00 –+00+
(Amnesty Int’l)
Political Terror Scale +N/A N/A +N/A N/A +
(US State Dept.)
Note: N/A signifies that the model itself with the specified dependent variable was not meaningful; ‘+’and‘’mean
statistically significant positive or negative relationships; and ‘0’ means no statistically significant relationship is
evident. The complete methodology and the estimated models are available in Olsen, Payne and Reiter supra n 5.
Transition Variable rendered 91 transitions in 74 countries.29 In total, these tran-
sitional countries used 49 trials, 27 truth commissions and 46 amnesties.
To assess the effect of tr uth commissions, the study uses widely accepted measures
of human rights – the Physical Integrity Rights Index (PHYSINT) from Cingranelli-
Richards (CIRI) Human Rights Dataset and the Political Terror Scale (PTS) – and
calculates the change in these scores over time.30 Both indices derive their data
from Amnesty International reports and US State Department country reports on
human rights practices. While derived from the same sources, they quantify these
reports in different ways. PHYSINT provides a scale that quantifies government
protection against specific human rights violations, including torture, extrajudicial
killings, political imprisonment and disappearance by counting the frequency of
their occurrence in a given country each year. PHYSINT is limited temporally
because it begins in 1980 and its coverage is somewhat sporadic during democratic
transitions. Nonetheless, it remains a widely accepted cross-national measure of
human rights violations. PTS, which begins in 1976, provides a scale indicating the
extent to which a country’s population is safe from manifestations of state terror,
such as wrongful imprisonment and torture.
Table 1 summarizes Olsen et al.’s TJDB project findings regarding truth com-
missions and human rights. Overall, the study shows that adopting some form
of transitional justice proves more likely to improve human rights than failing
to do so.31 Nonetheless, no transitional justice mechanism when used alone im-
proves human rights protection. Neither trials nor amnesties have a statistically
29 Polity IV, ‘Polity IV Project: Political Regime Characteristics and Transitions, 1800–2009,’
http://www.systemicpeace.org/polity/polity4.htm (accessed 7 September 2010). For a similar use
of Polity IV’s data to determine transitions and regime types, see, for example, David L. Epstein,
Robert Bates, Jack Goldstone, Ida Kristensen and Sharyn O’Halloran, ‘Democratic Transitions,’
American Journal of Political Science 50(3) (2006): 551–569; Sikkink and Walling, supra n 19. The
TJDB findings presented here are limited to 2004 rather than 2009 because of the coverage of the
most recent version of Polity IV at the time of the analysis.
30 ‘The CIRI Human Rights Data Project,’ http://ciri.binghamton.edu/ (accessed 7 September 2010);
‘Political Terror Scale, 1976–2008,’ http://www.politicalterrorscale.org/ (accessed 7 September
2010).
31 The key independent variable in the ‘TJ Overall’ analysis is ordered by the level of accountability
a country adopted within the 10-year period, where an amnesty is 1, a truth commission is 2 and
a trial is 3. While we recognize that coding a variable in this way introduces strong assumptions
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464 T. D. Olsen et al.
significant effect on those particular political objectives. The relationship between
truth commissions and human rights is statistically significant, but the effect is
negative. This means that adopting truth commissions alone to address past atroc-
ities increases the likelihood of a negative change in human rights measures. Only
two combinations of transitional justice mechanisms show statistically significant,
positive effects on human rights: (1) trials and amnesties, and (2) trials, amnesties
and truth commissions.
Wiebelhaus-Brahm’s study reaches similar conclusions on truth commissions.
He focuses on information he updated on the truth commissions identified in
existing studies by Priscilla Hayner, the US Institute of Peace and the Centre for
the Study of Violence and Reconciliation, with the findings updated with press
reports.32 He does not focus solely on democratic transitions, however, which
alters somewhat the set of cases for analysis when compared to the TJDB project.
Hisprojectincludesover150countriesinwhich29truthcommissionswereused
from 1981 to 2005.
Wiebelhaus-Brahm examines the immediate effects and long-term legacies of
truth commissions. To gauge the effect of a commission’s investigation, he first
analyzes each year in which it is in existence. During that time, truth commissions
conduct outreach and awareness raising, collect evidence and testimony, sometimes
conduct public hearings and generate a final report that summarizes their findings
and outlines recommendations for further measures to address the past and to
prevent a repeat of abuses in the future. Controlling for additional variables in
the model that other studies have found to influence human rights, Wiebelhaus-
Brahm finds that human rights protection tends to be more limited in countries
in which a truth commission is in progress than in other countries.
Second, to assess potential longer-term impacts, Wiebelhaus-Brahm measures
human rights levels each year following a truth commission. For this analysis, he
includes only those truth commissions that issue a public report. By doing so, he
identifies the commissions most likely to shape public opinion, create a human
rights culture, increase pressure for reform and deter human rights abuses. Even
when skewing results in favor of certain types of truth commissions that are more
likely to have a positive impact, Wiebelhaus-Brahm still finds that countries that
have conducted a truth commission in the past tend to have higher levels of human
rights abuses than those without one, holding other variables in the model constant.
In sum, both studies challenge prevailing assumptions about truth commissions.
On the one hand, we show that truth commissions by themselves are associated
with lower levels of subsequent human rights protections, at least physical integrity
(namely, that the difference between choosing between amnesties and a truth commission is the
same as choosing between a truth commission and a trial), we are only interested in the direction
of the effect, not its size.
32 Hayner, supra n 7; US Institute of Peace, ‘The Margarita S. Studemeister Digital Collections
in International Conflict Management: Truth Commissions Digital Collection,’ http://www.
usip.org/resources-tools/digital-collections (accessed 7 September 2010); Centre for the Study
of Violence and Reconciliation, ‘Justice in Perspective,’ http://www.justiceinperspective.org.za/
(accessed 7 September 2010).
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When Truth Commissions Improve Human Rights 465
rights as measured by CIRI and PTS. To put it in another way, countries that have
utilized truth commissions alone in the past tend to be worse defenders of human
rights than other countries, all else being equal. On the other hand, the results do
not suggest that truth commissions always have a negative impact on human rights.
On the contrary, our findings diverge from those of other studies by illustrating
that commissions can interact with other mechanisms to produce positive results.
Olsen et al. find that truth commissions play a positive role in improving human
rights when they are accompanied by trials and amnesties. Wiebelhaus-Brahm
also finds qualitative evidence that human rights tend to improve when truth
commissions are used with other transitional justice mechanisms, such as trials
and amnesties. In the remainder of the article, we examine potential explanations
for our findings and advance a justice balance theory to explain when, why and
how truth commissions succeed in promoting human rights.
Explaining the Findings
What explains the challenges our results pose to prevailing opinion on truth com-
missions and human rights improvements? Above, we highlighted some of the
shortcomings of existing single-case and small-ncase study research. We also
raised some initial comparisons with the only other large-ncross-national study of
truth commission impact, by Kim and Sikkink. Below, we explore the possible ex-
planations for differences in the three studies’ findings due to samples, definitions,
measures and methodology.
One explanation could be the selection of truth commission cases. However we
use a definition of truth commissions that closely resembles those of the other
studies. The TJDB project defines truth commissions as newly established, tem-
porary bodies officially sanctioned by the state or an international governmental
organization to investigate a pattern of human rights abuses and issue a report.
Wiebelhaus-Brahm adopts Mark Freeman’s definition of a truth commission:
An ad hoc, autonomous, and victim-centered commission of inquiry set up in and
authorized by a state for the primary purposes of (1) investigating and reporting
on the principal causes and consequences of broad and relatively recent patterns of
severe violence or repression that occurred in the state during determinate periods of
abusive rule or conflict, and (2) making recommendations for their redress and future
prevention.33
In addition, we, like most researchers, exclude preexisting or permanent govern-
ment institutions that investigate past human rights violations as part of their
official duties, as well as commissions created to investigate corruption, embezzle-
ment, fraud and similar crimes. We also share with other researchers the decision
to exclude nonstate, independent projects that investigate and uncover the truth
about past violations, as they do not represent official decisions made by state
actors.
33 Mark Freeman , Truth Commissions and Procedural Fairness (New York: Cambridge University Press,
2006), 18.
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466 T. D. Olsen et al.
Despite a shared definition, the truth commission cases in these and other
studies do not always match.34 The number of truth commissions identified by
each study varies slightly: the TJDB project finds 27 cases, Wiebelhaus-Brahm
finds 29 cases and Kim and Sikkink find 28. Yet, in total, the three studies share
only 19 cases. The difference in the cases chosen is due in part to the sample
selection strategy used for each study. For example, unlike Wiebelhaus-Brahm,
Kim and Sikkink do not include the truth commissions in Morocco or Zimbabwe
or the specific commissions in Sri Lanka in 1994 and Uruguay in 2000. Kim and
Sikkink use the presence of a democratic transition to define their sample, unlike
Wiebelhaus-Brahm, which may account for some of these discrepancies. The TJDB
project also requires an attempted transition in order for a country to be included
in the sample, rendering a different set of truth commission cases for analysis.
Nonetheless, Olsen et al.’s findings are consistent with Wiebelhaus-Brahm, and
not with Kim and Sikkink.
It is possible that unique features of the truth commissions upon which the
three studies do not agree could be driving the results. While none of the studies
uses selection criteria based on the quality of the truth commission, different
samples could lead to different outcomes because of those criteria. Thus, if the set
of cases includes a preponderance of those commissions with positive attributes,
we might expect success on human rights goals. Similarly, if our studies contain
more commissions with negative attributes, we might expect negative outcomes.
Future research will explore the different truth commission samples in each of the
three studies to assess the consistency of the results.35
Studies to determine whether particular attributes of truth commissions ex-
plain their success or failure have not yet produced definitive results. Most studies,
including ours and Kim and Sikkink’s, treat truth commissions as a uniform phe-
nomenon. In the parlance of quantitative studies, they tend to measure truth
commissions dichotomously: they either exist or they do not.36 While capturing
truth commission differences quantitatively is desirable, attempting to disaggre-
gate truth commissions by particular characteristics introduces methodological
challenges. Limited data availability for some truth commission cases makes it
difficult to develop a more sophisticated measure that could be applied uniformly
across all cases. In addition, the difficulty of quantifying truth commission charac-
teristics in a conceptually clear and theoretically sound manner raises another set
of challenges. Belinda Botha, for example, attempts to model strong and weak truth
commissions statistically. As a result of the lack of information on her coding and
data collection, however, the data set appears subjective.37 Disaggregating truth
34 For a discussion of the range of truth commission cases analyzed by different scholars, see, Brahm,
supra n 2.
35 The researchers in the TJDB project have recently begun a joint project with Kim and Sikkink to
examine the different results in their two studies.
36 Except in a crude sense, such as focusing solely on truth commissions that have issued final reports,
as in Wiebelhaus-Brahm, supra n 5.
37 Botha includes commissions’ resources,the thoroughness of investigations, credibility and publicity
as her measures of strength. She provides absolute numbers for the resources and thoroughness
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When Truth Commissions Improve Human Rights 467
commissions by their attributes, moreover, might reflect normative preferences
rather than empirically or theoretically driven sets of characteristics.38
In addition to the sample of cases, the way human rights are measured may help
explain why our findings differ. Nearly all quantitative studies of human rights use
PTS and CIRI. Nonetheless, these indicators are far from perfect, as some critics
argue.39 Scholars challenge PTS, for example, for making subjective assessments
about the degree of state terror that citizens face. CIRI, in contrast, counts the
frequency of reported abuses. However, this may reflect a different kind of bias due
to constraints on reporting abuses. Furthermore, these indices of human rights
reduce violations to a linear measure that varies between 1 and 5. Such a measure
fails to capture either the complex layers of atrocity or the broad range of economic,
cultural and social rights included in international human rights law. A more re-
cent assessment indicates that better data collection by the CIRI and PTS sources
makes it very difficult for countries to show improvements, even when they occur.
The result is that we might be more confident in those measures of positive change,
but we cannot be certain about negative change since it may reflect better informa-
tion and data, not worse human rights outcomes.40 Despite these limitations, CIRI
and PTS provide the only measures of violations of physical integrity rights over
time – the types of abuses upon which truth commission investigations usually
focus.41 More importantly, these standard measures cannot explain the different
results obtained by our studies and the Kim and Sikkink study. All of these quan-
titative analyses, after all, use the same measures, which thus provide a common
approach to human rights. By using more than one index, moreover, the analyses
can assess the different types of effects truth commissions have on the range of
data, but budget size and the number of cases investigated appear as a relative figure based on the
scope of violence and repression under investigation. Finally, it is unclear how she addressed the
problem of missing data, which is a formidable challenge for less well-known truth commissions.
See, Belinda M. Botha, ‘Truth Commissions and Their Consequences for Legitimacy’ (PhD diss.,
University of Houston, 1998).
38 In analyzing four truth commissions, Wiebelhaus-Brahm (supra n 5) has shown, for example,
that the case with the most success (Chile) also had the most restricted, rather than the broadest,
mandate. He has further shown that even commissions with strong institutional powers often lack
the ability or will to use them. For example, security forces frequently ignore truth commission
subpoenas, with little consequence. Resources mayhelp to explain success, as Uganda’s Commission
of Inquiry into Violations of Human Rights suspended operations several times because of a lack
of funds. Yet modest truth commissions with narrow mandates may accomplish as much or more
than expensive international tribunals in terms of accountability.
39 Thomas B. Jabine and Richard P. Claude, eds., Human Rights and Statistics: Getting the Record
Straight (Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1992); James M. McCormick and Neil
J. Mitchell, ‘Human Rights Violations, Umbrella Concepts, and Empirical Analysis,’ World Politics
49(4) (1997): 510–525.
40 Ann Marie Clark and Kathryn Sikkink, ‘Information Effects and Human Rights Data: Is the Good
News about Increased Human Rights Information Bad News for Human Rights Measures?’ (paper
presented at the Midwest Political Science Association annual meeting, Chicago, IL, 22–26 April
2010).
41 Although this is changing in several recent cases, this has been to the neglect of violations of
socioeconomic rights in many cases. See, Zinaida Miller, ‘Effects of Invisibility: In Search of
the “Economic” in Transitional Justice,’ International Journal of Transitional Justice 2(3) (2008):
266–291.
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468 T. D. Olsen et al.
rights and measures of human rights.42 Therefore, these measures, while imperfect,
provide a solid foundation for assessing truth commission impact.
Although the studies use the same measures, they use them differently. For
example, Olsen et al. calculate the change in human rights scores by subtracting
the score of 10 years posttransition from the score during the year of the transition.
This analysis, therefore, only includes those transitional justice mechanisms used
prior to and in the first 10 years of a democratic transition. While Wiebelhaus-
Brahm employs two-stage least-squares regression, the TJDB project uses linear
regression analysis.43 As such, rather than structuring the data in a country–year
format, the TJDB project structures the data such that the transition is the unit
of analysis. Wiebelhaus-Brahm and Kim and Sikkink, by contrast, organize their
data as time series. In other words, they examine year-over-year changes in human
rights in a given country. Yet, despite the methodological similarities between
the two, Wiebelhaus-Brahm and Kim and Sikkink reach different conclusions,
while Wiebelhaus-Brahm and Olsen et al. arrive at the same conclusion despite
methodological differences. Different model specifications may help explain the
differences between Wiebelhaus-Brahm and Kim and Sikkink, but they do not
appear to settle the larger question of the nature of truth commissions’ impact on
human rights.
In sum, the three studies show similarities and differences in how they struc-
ture their statistical models and measure key concepts. Although the TJDB project
adopts an alternative approach, its findings are consistent with Wiebelhaus-Brahm.
Some other potential weaknesses, such as the measure of human rights, are con-
sistent across the studies. Differences in truth commission cases included in each
study seem to be the most promising explanation for the divergent findings. How-
ever, more systematic testing of different models and specifications is necessary
to reach more definitive conclusions. While further research can explain the dif-
ferent findings methodologically, our qualitative evidence also suggests that truth
commissions have had a negative impact on human rights by themselves, while
promoting improvement when combined with other mechanisms. Finally, all three
studies provide limited theoretical explanations for their findings. In the following
section, we outline a justice balance explanation of truth commissions’ negative
and positive relationship to human rights improvements.
42 Using a range of measures is important. Christian Davenport’s research, for example, shows that
democracy has a different effect on two measures of human rights, physical integrity and civil
liberties. See, Christian Davenport, State Repression and the Domestic Democratic Peace (New York:
Cambridge University Press, 2007).
43 Two-stage least-squares regression is a statistical technique used to account for the suspected
endogeneity of a variable (in this case, the presence of a truth commission) in a regression model.
In the first stage of the model, the endogenous variable is regressed on all of the exogenous variables
in the model. In the second stage, the regression equation is estimated, but with the endogenous
variable replaced by predicted values from the first-stage equation. A linear regression model is a
basic ordinary least-squares estimation whereby the goal is to identify a model fit that minimizes
the sum of squared residuals.
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When Truth Commissions Improve Human Rights 469
Explaining Truth Commission Impact:
The Justice Balance
A ‘justice balance’ approach assumes that truth commissions on their own tend
not to achieve human rights goals as a result of the imbalances they introduce. On
their own, truth commissions tend to emphasize either accountability or impunity.
Accountability alone can jeopardize stability, a crucial factor for the transition from
authoritarian rule. Impunity, meanwhile, fails to create the legal, political or moral
environment necessary to deter future human rights violations. Combined with
amnesties and trials, by contrast, truth commissions can achieve human rights
goals by promoting a balance between stability and accountability. The balance
of accountability and stability can occur without truth commissions, as the Olsen
et al. study shows. Truth commissions, however, may play an important role in
improving human rights by fortifying the balance. In this section, we develop a
theoretical explanation for the justice balance argument and undertake a brief
plausibility probe of the diverse truth commission cases of Nepal, South Korea
and Chile. We also briefly consider some truth commission projects that illustrate
particular contextual challenges truth commissions face in achieving the justice
balance on their own and without trials and amnesties.
This justice balance approach is consistent with existing explanations for truth
commissions’ human rights success. One approach considers truth commissions
successful when they create a middle road between morally and legally objection-
able impunity and politically risky trials. Paradoxically, another suggests that they
succeed when they reinforce trials, heightening accountability, deterrence and hu-
man rights norms. In the first pathway, to succeed, truth commissions avoid trials.
In the second, they succeed by promoting accountability.44 Our findings reject both
explanations in favor of one that shows how truth commissions complement the
work of trials and amnesties rather than emphasizing one outcome (accountability
or stability) over the other.
The TJDB project finds that trials and amnesties increase the likelihood of
improving human rights with or without truth commissions. This suggests that,
rather than navigating a middle path between trials and amnesties, commissions
play an important role in enhancing the human rights-promoting qualities of
those mechanisms. The capacity of truth commissions to foster human rights
under these conditions is consistent with the accountability, deterrence and human
rights norms explanations.
Amnesties pose a problem for the explanation, however. The middle-road view
suggests that truth commissions appease past perpetrators who might otherwise
jeopardize the human rights project. They thus balance political stability through
nonprosecutorial accountability mechanisms. This explanation suggests that when
44 For a summary of the maximalist, minimalist and moderate approaches to transitional justice and
the role that truth commissions play in them, see, Tricia D. Olsen, Leigh A. Payne and Andrew
Reiter, Transitional Justice in Balance: Comparing Processes, Weighing Efficacy (Washington, DC: US
Institute of Peace, 2010).
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470 T. D. Olsen et al.
they prevent perpetrators from mobilizing against accountability, truth commis-
sions achieve success on the human rights front.
The justice balance approach suggests a way in which truth commissions achieve
success in human rights by simultaneously enhancing accountability and defus-
ing perpetrators’ opposition to accountability. The process involves linking truth
commissions to trials and amnesties. Given the fact that they hold the prospect
of punishing wrongdoers, trials should be able to advance accountability without
truth commissions. But truth commissions enhance accountability by investi-
gating widespread complicity in past human rights violations. Rather than limit
the investigation of criminal responsibility to particular individuals, commissions
establish the systematic nature of violations, heightening awareness of past vio-
lence in society and potentially promoting human rights norms. Yet, as the TJDB
project shows, trials or accountability alone do not seem to be enough to promote
improvements in human rights.
Amnesty provides political stability by defusing potential spoilers, but positive
results on human rights depend on amnesties accompanying trials. A balance is
struck when some perpetrators face trials while others enjoy impunity. Rather
than blanket amnesties, therefore, the positive benefits for human rights reflect
partial amnesties, which appease those perpetrators who will not be held account-
able in a court of law. They also divide perpetrators, limiting the possibility of
those facing prosecution successfully mobilizing perpetrators against accountabil-
ity. Partial amnesties, in other words, allow for some trials. Truth commissions fit
into this scenario by exposing and holding accountable through nonprosecutorial
processes those perpetrators who have legal immunity. In other words, they en-
hance accountability even where partial amnesties protect perpetrators from trial.
Truth commissions thus succeed in improving human rights along with trials and
amnesties by enhancing accountability and maintaining stability.
On their own, truth commissions do not achieve the same level of success. They
face barriers in appeasing potential spoilers and promoting accountability. On
the accountability side, they raise expectations of truth and justice. Unless trials
accompany the process, victims and survivors will not see these promises realized.
Truth commissions by themselves, therefore, tend to provoke a backlash from the
very groups they aim to defend.
Research on particular cases illustrates these points about the role of truth
commissions. For example, studies of victims’ reactions to truth commissions
reveal deep disappointment, even in the highly acclaimed case of the South African
TRC.45 Rather than enhancing accountability, truth commissions without trials
45 David Backer, ‘The Human Face of Justice: Victims’ Responses to South Africa’s Truth and Rec-
onciliation Commission Process’ (PhD diss., University of Michigan, 2004). See also, College
of William and Mary, ‘West Africa Transitional Justice (WATJ) Project,’ http://www.wm.edu/
as/government/research/undergraduateresearch/watj/index.php (accessed 7 September 2010);
Catherine Jenkins, ‘“They Have Built a Legal System without Punishment”: Reflections on the
Use of Amnesty in the South African Transition,’ Transformation: Critical Perspectives on South-
ern Africa 64 (2007): 27–65; Francesca Pizzutelli, ‘Moving Away from the South African Model:
Amnesties and Prosecutions in the Practice of 40 Truth Commissions’ (paper presented at the
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminar Series, Oxford, UK, 25 January 2010).
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When Truth Commissions Improve Human Rights 471
seem to perpetuate impunity, allowing perpetrators to ‘get away with murder.’
The TRC’s truth-for-amnesty provision threatened trials for those who did not
come forward. In fact, only a small number of perpetrators faced trials and the
prosecution failed to gain a guilty verdict in most cases. The TRC may have
heightened demand for accountability, but the trials did not deliver it.46
Perpetrators do not always share the view that truth commissions protect them
from prosecution, however. Truth commissions, after all, often recommend prose-
cutions, sometimes interrogate perpetrators and occasionally expose perpetrators
to social stigma or retaliation by naming them or disclosing and condemning their
past violent acts. Perpetrators thus view truth commissions as violating amnesty
law provisions even when they do not put perpetrators on trial. The example of
Brazil illustrates this situation. The military responded aggressively to the Brazilian
government’s recent decision to hold a truth commission, rejecting the decision
on the basis that it violated the 30-year-old blanket amnesty law.47 In such a sce-
nario, the truth commission option fails to promote either the stability or the
accountability necessary for improvements in human rights protection.
Whereas the Brazilian military seems to fear the potential strength of a truth
commission, Nepal represents the opposite case of a truth commission being too
weak to bring stability and accountability. The Commission of Inquiry to Locate
the Persons Disappeared during the Panchayat Period was formed in 1990, the
same year as the political transition. The Commission had a narrow mandate
to investigate 100 cases of human rights violations that occurred during the au-
thoritarian period.48 It may have succeeded in appeasing potential human rights
violators through its lack of subpoena power and inability to name perpetrators.
These reduced powers, however, only allowed the Commission to identify 35 cases
as disappearances, with the fates of the remaining 65 victims declared ‘unknown.’
The government offered amnesty to political prisoners.49 While nongovernmental
organizations welcomed the move, they continued to pressure for accountability
and investigations into additional human rights abuses from the Panchayat period,
as well as the subsequent Nepali civil war. In 2007, the Supreme Court seemed to re-
spond by calling for a new commission to conduct investigations into a broader set
of human rights abuses. King Gyanendra was accused of human rights violations,
but was peacefully deposed in 2008 without standing trial.
Nepal possesses many characteristics conducive to improvements in human
rights: broad awareness of and demand for accountability for human rights vi-
olations, civil society pressure to promote human rights norms and a transition
46 See, David Backer, ‘Watching a Bargain Unravel? A Panel Study of Victims’ Attitudes about Transi-
tional Justice in Cape Town, South Africa,’ International Journal of Transitional Justice 4(3) (2010):
443–56.
47 ‘Lula and the Generals: Don’t Look Back,’ Economist, 9 January 2010; ‘Tensions Grow in Brazil:
Military Rejects Truth Commission to Investigate HR Crimes,’ Santiago Times, 4 January 2010;
Juliette Kerr, ‘Brazilian President Rewords Human Rights Programme Following Objections from
Armed Forces,’ Global Insight 15 (2010).
48 Hayner,supran7.
49 Bhola Rana, ‘King Birendra Pardons Political Prisoners,’ United Press International, 17 May 1990.
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472 T. D. Olsen et al.
to a new federal republic. A 2008 Human Rights Watch report, however, remarks
that the 1990 Commission’s recommendations were never implemented.50 While
there has been periodic talk of a new truth commission since the civil war’s end, it
has not been enacted. Indeed, Nepal’s Ministry of Peace and Reconstruction only
finalized a draft bill on a new truth and reconciliation commission in early 2010.
This commission may or may not achieve greater success on the human rights
front.
By contrast, case study evidence supports the claim that combining truth com-
missions with other transitional justice tools improves human rights. For example,
Wiebelhaus-Brahm’s study provides contextual reasons why truth commissions on
their own are unlikely to deter human rights violations.51 In particular, their success
is influenced by the cessation of violence and effective crime control. Amnesties
tend to assist in demobilizing combatants and ending violence, as the threat of
prosecutions tends to assist governments in deterring crime. Thus, the two human
rights-enhancing contextual factors presented by Wiebelhaus-Brahm appear to
explain the success of truth commissions on human rights goals when they accom-
pany trials and amnesties. Even where truth commissions could be viewed as only
partially successful, they have a positive impact on human rights when they ac-
company trials and amnesties. South Korea and Chile illustrate this phenomenon.
In South Korea, the mobilization of civil society forces against the authoritarian
regime led to a democratic transition in 1988, under the tutelage of the military
dictatorship of Roh Tae Woo. Prior to the transition, the dictatorship granted
amnesty to 2,335 political prisoners, including, most famously, future democratic
President Kim Dae Jung. After the transition, the new government continued to
grant amnesty to perpetrators of human rights crimes. Despite these amnesties,
courts delivered death penalty convictions against Roh Tae Woo and another for-
mer dictator, Chun Doo Hwan, for the 1980 Kwangju Massacre of democratic
opposition forces, among other charges. Their pardon by democratic President
Kim Young Sam, coupled with reparations paid to individual victims, provoked
criticism in the human rights community that the government had attempted to
cover up, rather than expose and acknowledge, past violence.
Efforts by subsequent democratic governments to reveal the past through a series
of commissions of inquiry led to the 2005 establishment of the South Korean Truth
and Reconciliation Commission (TRCK). The TRCK could be viewed as having
reinforced prosecutorial accountability by investigating particular crimes. It also
suggested that courts investigate and judge other crimes, particularly the Kwangju
50 Human Rights Watch, ‘Nepal,’ in World R epo r t (2008). For information on the Nepalese
truth commission, see also, US Institute of Peace, Transitional Justice in Nepal: A Look at the
International Experience of Truth Commissions (September 2007); Amnesty International, ‘Nepal:
Reconciliation Does Not Mean Impunity – A Memorandum on the TRC Bill,’ ASA31/006/2007
(13 August 2007).
51 Wiebelhaus-Brahm, supra n 5.
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When Truth Commissions Improve Human Rights 473
Massacre.52 Three years into its term, the TRCK had investigated about 3,000 of
the 11,000 cases submitted to it. Of these, it could verify the truth in just 1,813.53
Public opinion remains divided over the TRCK process. According to a Sisa
Journal poll, Korean society is still split nearly evenly into three groups: those
who perceive the truth commission as advancing an important process, those
who consider it a negative factor in the process of democratic development and
those who believe that the truth process began before Korean society was ready
to embrace it.54 Thus, while victims have mobilized for justice, others in society
credit the military regime with the country’s economic success. In other words, no
consensus exists on the relative merits of the TRCK. Insufficient support allowed
the government to close the TRCK in March 2010.
The high expectations surrounding the TRCK and its limited success show that
new democracies that rely solely on a truth commission tend to see an increase in so-
cial problems. On the other hand, the case illustrates that when truth commissions
accompany amnesties and trials, they do not prevent stability and accountability
functions from evolving. Indeed, they complement and reinforce those functions,
even when they lack widespread support within society or government.
Similarly, Chile’s success on human rights has depended in part on the balance of
stability and accountability provided by a truth commission, trials and amnesties.55
Former dictator General Augusto Pinochet unexpectedly lost a referendum in 1988.
Chile’s political right subsequently lost the presidential election the following year
to the Concertaci´
on political alliance. The new president, Patricio Aylwin, sought a
middle ground between his core constituents, who demanded accountability, and
Pinochet, who famously threatened, ‘The day they touch any one of my men, the
state of law is ended.’56 The military and security forces enjoyed immunity from
prosecution under a 1978 amnesty law. Rather than challenge that law, Aylwin
created the Chilean Truth and Reconciliation Commission (known as the Rettig
Commission) to establish some measure of responsibility for past human rights
violations.
52 See, Ahn Byung-ook, ‘President’s Greeting,’ in Truth and Reconciliation: Activities of the
Past T hree Years (Seoul: Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Republic of Korea, 2009),
http://jinsil.go.kr/pdf/%EC%98%81%EB%AC%B8%EB%B0%B1%EC%84%9C 20MS%ED%8C
%8C%EC%9D%BC 0205.pdf (accessed 7 September 2010).
53 Ibid. For additional information on the South Korean process, see, Hunjoon Kim, ‘Seeking Truth
after Fifty Years: The National Committee for Investigation of the Truth about the Jeju 4.3 Events,’
International Journal of Transitional Justice 3(3) (2009): 406–423; In-sup Han,‘Kwangju and Beyond:
Coping with Past State Atrocities in South Korea,’ Human Rights Quarterly 27(3) (2005): 998–1045.
54 The poll found 36% felt that the truth commission process was necessary, 29.4% believed it was
unnecessary and that it deepened the social divisions in the country and 26% found it somewhat
necessary but thought it occurred too soon. Ahn Byung-ook, ‘Verification of Truth,’ Korea Times,
26 May 2008.
55 ForanextendeddiscussionofChile,see,Wiebelhaus-Brahm,supran5.Seealso,Eric
Brahm, ‘The Chilean Truth and Reconciliation Commission,’ Beyond Intractability (July 2005),
http://www.beyondintractability.org/case studies/Chilean Truth Commission.jsp?nid=5221 (ac-
cessed 7 September 2010); Cath Collins, Post-Transitional Justice: Human Rights Trials in Chile
and El Salvador (University Park, PA: Penn State University Press, 2010).
56 La Epoca, 11 October 1989, 13.
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The Commission’s final report in 1991 did not seem to bring either the desired
stability or accountability. In an attempt to enhance both, Aylwin publicly called
on
the Armed Forces and forces of order, and all who have had participation in the excesses
committed, [to] make gestures of recognition of the pain caused and cooperate in
diminishing it.57
However, the military and the judiciary roundly rejected the Commission’s
findings.58 By contrast, the human rights community criticized the Commission
for failing to bring accountability. Political unrest followed, including assassina-
tions of right-wing politicians, most famously Jaime Guzm´
an. Fearing instability,
Aylwin declared the period of reconciliation over.59
Although discussion of past human rights abuses was temporarily suppressed, as
the decade progressed the prospects for accountability improved. Pinochet’s fate
attracts the most attention. Although British authorities initially held Pinochet
for extradition to Spain to stand trial for human rights violations, they eventually
allowed him to return to Chile in 2000.60 Nonetheless, he was reduced to fighting
criminal and civil charges to the end of his life. Chilean courts, however, were be-
ginning to move even earlier. From the mid-1990s, victims’ groups had increasing
success in redefining disappearance cases as kidnappings, which fell outside of the
amnesty, under what became known as the Guzm´
an doctrine. The proliferation
of court cases, in turn, instigated renewed investigations into human rights abuses
during the dictatorship by the National Commission on Political Imprisonment
and Torture.
Chile represents a case in which amnesty and truth commissions initially im-
peded progress on human rights. Nonetheless, the Rettig Commission produced
information that eventually contributed to court cases. Moreover, it made several
recommendations designed to boost human rights in the future. Although some
minor reforms were enacted shortly after the Commission, the Senate blocked
many of them. Later, with Pinochet’s reputation tarnished by human rights and
corruption scandals, the Chilean right grew less hostile to human rights reforms,
including some recommended by the Commission. As such, adding trials ulti-
mately produced a justice balance that brought about improvements in human
rights.61
57 Human Rights Watch, ‘Chile,’ in Wor ld R e po r t (1992).
58 Malcolm Coad, ‘Pinochet Snubs Report on Killings,’ Guardian, 29 March 1991; Mark Ensalaco,
Chile under Pinochet: Recovering the Truth (Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press,
2000).
59 Wiebelhaus-Brahm, supra n 5.
60 Madeleine Davis, ed., The Pinochet Case: Origins, Progress and Implications (London: Institute of
Latin American Studies, 2003); Naomi Roht-Arriaza, The Pinochet Effect: Transnational Justice in
the Age of Human Rights (Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2006). See also, Cath
Collins, ‘Human Rights Trials in Chile during and after the “Pinochet Years,”International Journal
of Transitional Justice 4(1) (2010): 67–86.
61 In September 2009, the Chilean Congress approved a bill that reopened the truth commission
investigations. See, Kaycie Rupp, ‘Chile’s Re-opened Human Rights Investigations and Pi˜
nera’s
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When Truth Commissions Improve Human Rights 475
One final note is that truth commissions’ restorative processes also enhance the
accountability and stability function of the justice balance. Acknowledgment of,
and reparations for, crimes reinforces accountability. Forgiveness encounters, or
other mechanisms for perpetrators’ confessions, further establish responsibility for
crimes. In terms of balancing stability and accountability, some truth commission
processes, such as South Africa’s TRC and Timor-Leste’s Commission for Recep-
tion, Truth and Reconciliation, offered amnesty in exchange for confession.62 The
justice balance argument suggests that success in human rights from these pro-
cesses will likely result from how they complement trials and amnesties, rather
than through substituting for them.
In sum, when a balance is struck between trials that deter human rights viola-
tions and amnesties that provide for the long-term stability of the political system,
human rights violations tend to decline. Truth commissions added into this mix
do not jeopardize the balance, but rather enhance it. They increase accountabil-
ity by exposing systematic patterns of abuse. They do so without undermining
amnesties that are the product of negotiated transitions from authoritarianism or
war. Furthermore, they provide a blueprint for reform that, if implemented, should
improve human rights protections. The prospects for the implementation of rec-
ommendations, however, appear related to some combination of the protection
afforded by amnesties and the sanction provided by trials.
Conclusion
Our studies of transitional justice mechanisms defy existing assumptions and
claims regarding a simple and positive relationship between truth commissions
and human rights improvements. We have revealed the limitations of truth com-
missions in achieving their human rights goals. These results emerge despite using
truth commission definitions, human rights measures and statistical models that
are similar to those used in other studies. Even when the methods and sample in
our two studies diverged, we achieved the same results. The dual strategy of iso-
lating truth commissions from other mechanisms to see their independent impact
and analyzing their interaction with trials and amnesties produced results that
challenge expectations.
Our negative findings could be interpreted as a recommendation to avoid truth
commissions. Such a conclusion would be premature, shortsighted and artless. We
say premature and shortsighted because truth commissions contain many goals,
not just the promotion of human rights. More research is needed to determine
whether truth commissions succeed in achieving other important goals, such as
producing an official truth about the past that allows societies to move forward,
Balancing Act,’ Council on Hemispheric Affairs (3 March 2010), http://www.coha.org/chile’s-re-
opened-human-rights-investigations-and-pinera’s-balancing-act/ (accessed 7 September 2010).
62 In Timor-Leste, the amnesty process was confined to low-level offenders who had not committed
gross human rights violations. For a discussion of how the process worked, see, Patrick Burgess,
JusticeandReconciliationinEastTimor:TheRelationshipbetweentheCommissionforReception,
Truth and Reconciliation and the Courts,’ Criminal Law Forum 15 (2004): 135–158.
International Journal of Transitional Justice, Vol. 4, 2010, 457–476
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476 T. D. Olsen et al.
giving voice to victims or recognizing the protagonists of, and the need for, social
justice. Indeed, these goals may justify the use of truth commissions, while hu-
man rights goals rely on other mechanisms. It would be premature to abandon
a truth commission model before sufficient research has determined that such
commissions are ineffective or deleterious for these other goals. Moreover, ignor-
ing the other potential goals of truth commissions – beyond human rights – is
shortsighted.
An artless use of this study would ignore the findings that truth commissions con-
tribute to human rights improvements when combined with trials and amnesties.
Truth commissions, therefore, should not be viewed as necessarily harmful for
human rights. After all, statistical studies identify tendencies in a pattern of data
but do not predict every case. Instead, the analysis in this article shows that, if
they operate alone without any form of accountability from trials or stability from
amnesties, truth commissions are likely to have a negative impact. The artful ad-
vocacy project that emerges from this study, therefore, is to promote commissions
in conjunction with trials and amnesties. It suggests that where impunity prevails,
human rights improvements may still occur with the adoption of trials or tri-
als and truth commissions. This combination allows truth commissions to fulfill
important social goals without impeding the political goal of protecting human
rights.
Even with 30 years of experience, dozens of examples and numerous studies of
truth commissions to draw on, we have not resolved all of the questions regarding
truth commissions’ success. This article cautions against optimistic assumptions
regarding commissions’ impact when they are established alone. Yet it examines
only human rights goals. Additional research should determine where truth com-
missions on their own might succeed in achieving other important goals. The
article further emphasizes the importance of interaction among transitional jus-
tice mechanisms, but it has focused exclusively on truth commissions, amnesties
and trials. More research might determine truth commissions’ success in achieving
particular goals when they interact with other forms of transitional justice, such as
reparations processes, lustration and vetting and institutional reforms. The num-
ber of cases and the history of transitional justice make these dynamic research
projects possible.
The findings of this article demonstrate the value of both isolating transitional
justice mechanisms and studying their interactions to determine when, how and
why they achieve important social justice goals. We conclude that success in im-
proving human rights protection most likely results from the interaction of trials’
accountability function and amnesties’ stability function. Our quantitative and
qualitative analysis suggests that truth commissions can play a valuable role in
enhancing that justice balance and in promoting human rights.
International Journal of Transitional Justice, Vol. 4, 2010, 457–476
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... Respecto a las amnistías, es decir, a las políticas estatales de perdón e impunidad por violaciones a los derechos humanos, la evidencia presentada por Snyder & Vinjamuri (2003) indica que éstas tienen un impacto positivo en la promoción de la democracia y la prevención de abusos estatales, mientras que el estudio de Dancy et al. (2019) las relaciona con mejoras en el ejercicio de libertades civiles, pero no con la disminución de la violencia institucional. En el caso de las comisiones de la verdad, vale decir, las medidas extrajudiciales de justicia transicional, los resultados también son mixtos: los estudios de Olsen, Payne, & Reiter (2010) y Olsen, Payne, Reiter, & Wiebelhaus-Brahm (2010) plantean que las comisiones tienen un impacto negativo en la protección de los derechos humanos, mientras Dancy & Thoms (2022) presentan evidencia contraria que describe una relación positiva entre el uso de este mecanismo de justicia transicional y los niveles de respeto a los derechos humanos. Los estudios también divergen en cuanto al impacto combinado de enjuiciamientos, amnistías y comisiones de la verdad. ...
... En la misma línea, los autores plantean que, por si solas, las comisiones de la verdad impactan negativamente en la protección de los derechos humanos porque no logran promover la rendición de cuentas ni generar estabilidad política en el proceso de transición. Pero si las comisiones de la verdad se combinan con enjuiciamientos y amnistías mejoraran los niveles de democracia y protección de los derechos humanos en el corto y largo plazo, ya que contribuyen a reforzar el equilibrio de la justicia transicional (Olsen, Payne, Reiter, & Wiebelhaus-Brahm, 2010). ...
... Por su parte, las comisiones de la verdad refieren a organismos temporales y oficialmente sancionados, que se constituyen con el mandato de investigar períodos específicos de abusos estatales ocurridos en el pasado (Dancy & Thoms, 2022;Kim, 2019;Olsen, Payne, Reiter, & Wiebelhaus-Brahm, 2010). Su finalidad explícita es establecer la verdad sobre los abusos pasados y evitar que se repitan en el futuro (Hayner, 2008). ...
Thesis
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El objetivo de la tesis fue evaluar la contribución de los mecanismos de justicia transicional a la prevención de golpes de estado y la protección de los derechos humanos en los países de América Latina y el Caribe que experimentaron transiciones democráticas entre 1970 y 2010. Para cumplir con este objetivo, se formularon siete hipótesis basadas en las teorías de alcance medio vigentes en el campo de estudio. La prueba de hipótesis consistió en estimar coeficientes de regresión logística de la probabilidad de ocurrencia de golpes de estado y coeficientes de regresión lineal del puntaje de protección latente de los derechos humanos de integridad física, en función del número de enjuiciamientos, amnistías y comisiones de la verdad acumuladas en los años posteriores a la transición democrática. En todos los modelos, se incluyeron variables de efecto fijo por país e indicadores de control estadísticos del crecimiento económico, el nivel de democracia, el tamaño de la población, la independencia del poder judicial, y la existencia de conflictos armados. Los resultados obtenidos muestran, en primer lugar, que las amnistías están correlacionadas positivamente con la probabilidad de ocurrencia de golpes de estado, mientras que los enjuiciamientos y comisiones de la verdad la disminuyen significativamente. En segundo lugar, los resultados revelaron correlaciones positivas entre los enjuiciamientos y comisiones de la verdad, y el nivel de protección de los derechos humanos en los países estudiados.
... Thus, there is a need for further empirical evidence of the impact of truth on reconciliation. In the last decades there has been increased emphasis on the need to carefully assess the effects of transitional justice (Brahm, 2007;Dancy et al., 2010;Dancy & Thoms, 2022;Gibson, 2004a;2004b, 2006Mendeloff, 2004Mendeloff, , 2009Olsen et al., 2010b;Olsen et al., 2010c;Sikkink & Walling, 2007;Wiebelhaus-Brahm, 2010). Despite the linkage of truth and reconciliation in popular views and amongst policy activists (Daly, 2008;Kochanski, 2020), the findings are mixed, particularly with respect to polarized societies (Bassiouni 1996;Sarkin 1999). ...
... Participant grievances may, from a programmatic perspective, seem irrelevant as international policymakers, and to some extent researchers, often evaluate TCs based on mandates and goals that reflect the priorities of international actors. These markers of success include strengthening liberal democratic norms (Brahm 2007;Chapman and Ball 2001;Minow 1998;Olsen et al. 2010), preventing recurrence of conflict (Lie, Binningsbø, and Gates 2007;Loyle and Appel 2017;Snyder and Vinjamuri 2003), or establishing a national, historical narrative of the previous war (Bakiner 2016;Hayner 2011). However, as for most types of international peacebuilding interventions, TCs are subject to demands and expectations from multiple and often contradictory audiences (Gippert 2016;Von Billerbeck and Gippert 2017;Whalan 2017). ...
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There is a growing awareness that truth commissions (TCs) often leave victim and ex-combatant participants aggrieved. This is problematic since it can undermine support for peace processes. When attempting to explain such shortcomings, previous research has not paid sufficient attention to the patrimonial sources of TC-participants’ frustration. We argue that such forms of disenchantment are largely caused by internationalised TCs’ patrimonial mode of working, utilising tactics such as motorcades as manifestations of power and brokers to mobilise witnesses. To highlight the relevance of our argument, we use the work of the Sierra Leone Truth and Reconciliation Commission as an example.
Article
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Many post-conflict and post-transition countries use truth commissions to address the legacy of the past. However, truth commissions are products of the political context and often reflect the power balance at the time of creation. More than half of truth commissions show some form of one-sided treatment. To what extent does this matter? Has the public priced in the political circumstances or does a one-sided truth commission damage expectations of peace? Using an experiment to deal with the endogeneity between the truth commission and context, I examine this question in an original survey in Northern Ireland. The findings show that one-sided processes significantly reduce support for the institution and the perceived prospects of reconciliation, with some support for a normative heuristic of fairness, while mechanisms of ethnic identity and victimization do not explain the differences. The research demonstrates the significance of implementing transitional justice in a just and equitable way.
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We know little about the processes surrounding the formulation and implementation of truth commission recommendations (TCRs). This article introduces the Beyond Words database, which systematically identifies and tracks the formulation and implementation processes behind 960 recommendations from 13 truth commissions established across Latin America between 1983 and 2012. The database offers information on factors shaping TCR formulation, identifies important characteristics of recommendations and assesses the level of implementation for each. We describe our methodology and the resultant database and examine findings linking TCR characteristics and contextual factors to levels of implementation. Overall, the implementation record is better than those previously considered.
Chapter
Transnational justice is the judicial and nonjudicial response used by societies to address widespread human rights violations, mass atrocities, or other forms of collective trauma. In nations transitioning from autocratic regimes, those emerging from periods of civil conflict and war, and those coming to terms with large‐scale violations of international law, these processes help societies reestablish the rule of law, hold perpetrators accountable and bring justice to victims, and heal communities through reconciliation. Addressing gender justice is a key facet of the transnational justice, since women and girls are particularly vulnerable to human rights abuses, including sexual and gender‐based violence (SGBV).
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This article will present the case of Argentina and the conditions, struggles and social actors that made the establishment of the world’s first successful truth commission possible after the most recent dictatorship, in power between 1976 and 1983. This study is aimed at not only acknowledging the work of civil society organizations, who pressure powerholders to be responsive to victims’ concerns, but to argue that victims’ organizations were the ones who took a leading role in the truth commissions/achieving justice or human rights. The article will also show that victims’ organizations have worked to reach their goals by engaging with the state from a proactive and empowered position that pushed the process forward over government resistance. Through this in-depth case study, the article aims to transform the question from what shall be done in terms of truth commissions to who shall do it. The assumption is that the leading role of victims’ organizations in engaging with the state through participatory democracy can foster truth-seeking mechanisms beyond the limits of realpolitik. Keywords: Argentina; democracy; social change; truth commission; victims’ organizations, civil society, government resistance, participatory democracy. To cite this work: Vegh Weis, Valeria (2022) Exploring the First World’s First Successful Truth Commission: Argentina’s CONADEP and the Role of Victims in Truth-Seeking, Journal of Human Rights Practice, online first, XX, 1–18
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Era pra pembentukan UU PHAM maupun peraturan perundang-undangan terkait, didapati sejumlah pelanggaran hak asasi manusia yang berat secara masif dan belum mendapat penyelesaian hukum namun cenderung diselesaikan melalui pendekatan represif seperti halnya kasus G 30 S/PKI 1965, kasus Tanjung Priok 1984, kasus Mesuji Lampung 1989, kasus Timor Timur, dan sejumlah kasus pada awal reformasi 1998 yang cenderung diselesaikan melalui kekuatan yang dimiliki oleh penguasa maupun militer, bukan berdasarkan pada suatu mekanisme negara yang mengedepankan keadaban maupun hak asasi manusia. Era ini juga ditandai dengan sejumlah kecil international hard law hak asasi manusia diratifikasi maupun diabsorpsi dalam legislasi hak asasi manusia Indonesia. Langkah-langkah yang menjadi akibat “tekanan” dunia internasional akhirnya mendorong pemerintah menetapkan Keputusan Presiden Nomor 50 Tahun 1993 terkait Komisi Nasional Hak Asasi Manusia (selanjutnya disebut sebagai Keppres 50/1993) sebagai tonggak awal perhatian terhadap persoalan hak asasi manusia. Bentuk hukum Keputusan Presiden ini menjadi persoalan mengingat dapat sewaktu-waktu Komnas HAM ini dibubarkan oleh pemerintah dengan asas ius contrarius actus dengan sifat kelembagaan ad-hoc dan terkesan sebagai pernik penguasa semata. Selebihnya, pemerintah saat itu belum fokus terhadap persoalan hak asasi manusia termasuk langkah-langkah yang diperlukan untuk menyelesaikan sejumlah pelanggaran hak asasi manusia yang berat, sebaliknya pemerintah semakin memberi langkah-langkah koersif tidak bersesuaian dengan nilai hak asasi manusia. Awal reformasi di Indonesia membuka ruang yang lebih luas termasuk terhadap persoalan hak asasi manusia (khususnya pelanggaran berat hak asasi manusia), diawali melalui sidang MPR yang menetapkan Ketetapan MPR Nomor XVII/MPR/1998 tentang Hak Asasi Manusia (selanjutnya disebut sebagai Tap MPR HAM), Pasal 104 ayat (1) dan (2) Undang-undang Nomor 39 Tahun 1999 tentang Hak Asasi Manusia (selanjutnya disebut sebagai UU HAM) serta tuntutan negara-negara di dunia bagi Indonesia untuk mendorong proses demokratisasi salah satunya dengan menyelesaikan sejumlah pelanggaran berat hak asasi manusia di Indonesia. Fakta-fakta hukum dan langkah yang diputuskan oleh pemerintah pada era ini juga mendorong disusunnya Peraturan Pemerintah Pengganti Undang-undang Nomor 1 Tahun 1999 tentang Pembentukan Pengadilan Hak Asasi Manusia (selanjutnya disebut sebagai Perpu PHAM) yang kemudian pada proses pembahasan akhirnya ditolak oleh Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat akibat kegentingan memaksa yang tidak dipenuhi serta tidak bersesuaian dengan kehendak dari Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat saat itu. Kendati demikian, disusunlah kembali rancangan yang lebih memadai dan berjalan hingga diundangkanlah Undang-undang Nomor 26 Tahun 2000 tentang Pengadilan Hak Asasi Manusia (selanjutnya disebut sebagai UU PHAM) sebagai pijakan hukum positif pengaturan penyelesaian pelanggaran berat hak asasi manusia nasional. UU PHAM merupakan penjabaran amanat Pasal 104 UU HAM, menggariskan Pengadilan Hak Asasi Manusia dibentuk dalam rangka menyelesaikan pelanggaran berat hak asasi manusia yang menjamin terlaksananya hak asasi manusia melalui pemberian perlindungan, kepastian, dan perasaan yang aman bagi perseorangan ataupun masyarakat. UU PHAM memberikan ruang bagi penyelesaian baik melalui jalur yudisial maupun jalur ekstrayudisial. Rumusan pengakomodiran jalur-jalur penyelesaian dalam UU PHAM, dapat dilakukan baik melalui Pengadilan Hak Asasi Manusia yang permanen untuk kasus yang terjadi setelah diundangkannya UU PHAM, Pengadilan Hak Asasi Manusia ad-hoc untuk kasus yang retroaktif, maupun penyelesaian secara ekstrayudisial melalui Komisi Kebenaran dan Rekonsiliasi Nasional (selanjutnya disebut sebagai KKR). Penyelesaian melalui jalur yudisial maupun ekstrayudisial tersebut merefleksikan perwujudan social defence policy yang pada akhirnya merupakan bagian dari kebijakan sosial (social policy), namun UU PHAM masih belum sesuai dengan upaya-upaya penanggulangan pelanggaran hak asasi manusia yang berat. Seperti halnya data yang disampaikan oleh Kontras RI, bahwa sejak berlakunya UU PHAM (hingga tahun 2020 ini), UU PHAM memiliki sejumlah problematik hukum yang mendorong tertundanya sejumlah penyelesaian pelanggaran berat hak asasi manusia, dan dari 15 kasus hanya 3 kasus telah diselesaikan dengan mekanisme Pengadilan Hak Asasi Manusia ad-hoc yakni Peristiwa Tanjung Priok, Peristiwa Timor Timur, serta Peristiwa Abepura. Kasus-kasus inilah sesungguhnya menjadi momen krusial bagi Indonesia kedepan untuk memikirkan alternatif penyelesaian pelanggaran hak asasi manusia yang berat dengan mengedepankan jaminan bagi terwujudnya keadilan transisional di Indonesia, khususnya bagi para korban pelanggaran hak asasi manusia yang berat. Persoalan yang mendasar dari keseluruhan spektrum politik hukum di atas, terkait dengan pendekatan yang hendak diambil kedepan dalam merekonstruksi pengaturan kelembagaan penyelesaian ekstrayudisial terhadap pelanggaran hak asasi manusia yang berat dalam bingkai politik hukum nasional berlandaskan nilai-nilai Pancasila dalam Preambule UUD NRI Tahun 1945, ketentuan pada UUD NRI Tahun 1945 ataupun Ketetapan MPR yang masih berlaku, dan memungkinkan juga untuk dipertimbangkan bagaimana bekerjanya keadilan transisional untuk mewujudkan pelembagaan penyelesaian ekstrayudisial pada sejumlah negara dengan masa kelam oleh rezim pelanggar hak asasi manusia yang berat. Hal ini terkait dengan urgensi mendorong suatu kebutuhan hukum untuk menggariskan politik hukum penyelesaian pelanggaran hak asasi manusia yang berat melalui pembaharuan hukum positif dengan pengaturan yang dapat ditentukan terpisah atau disatukan dengan UU PHAM yang baru dengan dilandasi garis politik hukum penyelesaian penyelesaian ekstrayudisial pelanggaran hak asasi manusia yang berat di Indonesia, mengingat politik hukum menghendaki adanya suatu pendalaman baik dari faktor non-hukum (faktor politik) maupun faktor hukum untuk mengkaji persoalan menuju perwujudan pembangunan hukum nasional termasuk penataan peraturan perundang-undangan nasional. Hal tersebut ditujukan untuk mewujudnyatakan penyelesaian pelanggaran hak asasi manusia yang berat secara berkeadilan, ideal serta dapat diimplementasikan secara konkrit di Indonesia melalui pengkajian secara mendalam dalam tesis berjudul,”Politik Hukum Pengaturan Kelembagaan Penyelesaian Ekstrayudisial terhadap Pelanggaran Hak Asasi Manusia yang Berat di Indonesia”.
Chapter
Truth and Reconciliation Commissions look to the past to envision a better future. After years (1991–2002) of brutal conflict in Sierra Leone, there existed a need to confront a war that was characterized by widespread atrocities. The nation wanted to know what precipitated the war, but also how did it engulf its most precious resource, children, and youth?. At the start of the conflict, Sierra Leone was a nation of the young, with nearly half of its population composed of children and young adults. How can their energy and aspirations help the nation chart a new way forward? These questions gave birth to this chapter and to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Report for the Children of Sierra Leone. No truth commission in the past had ever produced such a report making it a relatively new and understudied phenomenon. Children are increasingly becoming a focus of truth commissions as societies with large youth populations seek more sustainable solutions to peace and development. This chapter describes how the child-friendly version of Sierra Leone’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission Report came about and how it gave special attention to the experiences of children and youth within the armed conflict. The second section examined how large marginalized youth populations can become key participants in the peace and reconciliation process. The third section examines how centering the needs and aspirations of young people are critical to societies with youth majorities.KeywordsSierra LeoneTruth and Reconciliation CommissionsYouth bulgeChildren
Article
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Throughout the world, truth commissions are being constructed under the hope that discovering the “truth” about a country's conflictual past will somehow contribute to “reconciliation.” Most such efforts point to South Africa's process as an exemplar of the powerful influence of truth finding. But has truth actually contributed to reconciliation in South Africa? No rigorous and systematic assessment of the truth and reconciliation process has ever been conducted. This article investigates the hypothesis that truth leads to reconciliation. Based on a survey of thirty-seven hundred South Africans in 2001, the author begins by giving both “truth” and “reconciliation” clear conceptual and operational meaning. The author reports empirical evidence that the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's “truth” is fairly widely accepted by South Africans of all races, that some degree of reconciliation characterizes South Africa today, and that the collective memory produced by the process (“truth”) did indeed contribute to reconciliation. The author then considers whether other divided countries might be able to use a similar process to propel themselves toward a more peaceful and democratic future.
Article
Despite the extended nature of many transitional justice processes, collection of relevant longitudinal primary data, especially at an individual level, is rarely observed as a means of assessing the impact of formal measures. This article reports on a panel survey conducted in 2002-2003 and 2008 with 153 victims of apartheid-era violations from Cape Town, South Africa. During the interval between the two waves of the survey, both undertaken after the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) completed its work, government policies concerning reparations, prosecutions and pardons undermined the compromises that were central to the TRC process and integral to the democratic transition. The data analysis shows that approval of the unique conditional amnesty offered by the TRC was at first surprisingly high, with many respondents acknowledging its practical rationale, but it fell dramatically by 2008. This decline in support is associated with an increased sense of the unfairness of amnesty and dissatisfaction with the extent of truth recovery. Knowledge of and attitudes about prosecutions and pardons do not appear to be contributing factors, though the results indicate a greater desire for accountability, even at the risk of instability. The findings emphasize the need for rigorous, ongoing evaluation of transitional justice processes to appreciate properly the complex and dynamic nature of individual attitudes and the influence of emergent events.
Article
The conditional amnesty process administered by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission was an innovative feature of the transition to democracy in South Africa, yet it remains relatively under-analysed in comparison with other aspects of the TRC’s work. Moreover, although the South African TRC has inspired a new generation of truth commissions in Africa and around the world, the amnesty process has never been repeated. This paper examines the context of the use of amnesty in South Africa and offers some critical reflections on the South African amnesty process, particularly in the context of the rise of international criminal law and the creation of the International Criminal Court. Noting that the demand for ‘amnesties for peace’ has not diminished, it argues that, although the South African amnesty process was in some respects flawed both in its conception and implementation, it merits consideration by other countries in transition and offers valuable lessons for the development of international legal policy.