Patricia Lundy
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Telling stories, facing truths
Memory, justice and post-conflict transition
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This chapter explores contemporary attitudes to 'ways of dealing with the past' particularly in terms of strategies designed to meet the 'judicial imperative' of transitional justice work. The end of the Second World War saw the first real attempt to develop international jurisprudence in order to deal with 'war crimes' and past human rights abuses. The chapter examines the ways in which the unfinished business issues have shaped contemporary perspectives on memory work and post-conflict justice. It then looks at some of the problems and ways forward for transitional justice and memory work in Northern Ireland today. Post-conflict transition in Northern Ireland has invariably been defined by the terms and conditions of the Good Friday Agreement (GFA). The GFA was a complex, multi-faceted document dealing with a wide range of issues that had both caused and arisen as a result of thirty years of conflict.

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Northern Ireland after the troubles

A society in transition

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