Title : | International Criminal, Tribunals as Actors of Domestic Change: The Impact on Media Coverage, Volume 2 | Material Type: | printed text | Authors: | Gerhard Kemp, Author ; Klaus Bachmann et Irena Ristic, Author | Publisher: | Peter Lang | Publication Date: | 2019 | Other publisher: | 2019 | Pagination: | 134 pages | Size: | 21cm | ISBN (or other code): | 978-3-631-77055-9 | Languages : | English | Keywords: | International Criminal Tribunals Actors Domestic Change | Class number: | 345.01 International Criminal Tribunals Actors Domestic Change | Abstract: | Do International Criminal Tribunals trigger social change, provide reconciliation, stabilize fragile post-conflict societies? Many authors claim they do, but they base their assumptions mainly on theoretical considerations and opinion polls. The editors and authors of this book take a different position: based on extensive field research in nine European and African countries, they examine whether tribunal decisions resulted in changes in media frames about the conflicts which gave rise to the creation of these tribunals. International Tribunals hardly ever shape or change the grand narratives about wars and other conflicts, but they often manage to trigger small changes in media frames which, in some cases, even lead to public reflexion about guilt and responsibility and more awareness for (the respective enemy's) victims. On an empirical basis, this book shows the potential of International Criminal Justice, the possibilities, but also the limits of International Criminal Tribunals. Volume 2 presents the evidence from Kenya, Rwanda, Sudan and South Sudan. | Link for e-copy: | DOI 103726/b15179 |
International Criminal, Tribunals as Actors of Domestic Change: The Impact on Media Coverage, Volume 2 [printed text] / Gerhard Kemp, Author ; Klaus Bachmann et Irena Ristic, Author . - berne : Peter Lang : www.peter.com, Berlin : 2019, 2019 . - 134 pages ; 21cm. ISBN : 978-3-631-77055-9 Languages : English Keywords: | International Criminal Tribunals Actors Domestic Change | Class number: | 345.01 International Criminal Tribunals Actors Domestic Change | Abstract: | Do International Criminal Tribunals trigger social change, provide reconciliation, stabilize fragile post-conflict societies? Many authors claim they do, but they base their assumptions mainly on theoretical considerations and opinion polls. The editors and authors of this book take a different position: based on extensive field research in nine European and African countries, they examine whether tribunal decisions resulted in changes in media frames about the conflicts which gave rise to the creation of these tribunals. International Tribunals hardly ever shape or change the grand narratives about wars and other conflicts, but they often manage to trigger small changes in media frames which, in some cases, even lead to public reflexion about guilt and responsibility and more awareness for (the respective enemy's) victims. On an empirical basis, this book shows the potential of International Criminal Justice, the possibilities, but also the limits of International Criminal Tribunals. Volume 2 presents the evidence from Kenya, Rwanda, Sudan and South Sudan. | Link for e-copy: | DOI 103726/b15179 |
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