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A Glimpse Into Contested Indigenous Peoples' Rights in Peru: The Forced Sterilization of Indigenous Women

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Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars
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This study examines Peru's status of indigenous peoples' rights.
Specifically, it assesses the state’s respect towards indigenous rights through a case omitted by the TRC but one that continues to dominate political rhetoric: the forced sterilization of women of indigenous and poor economic backgrounds. Specifically, the study focuses on memory initiatives within symbolic reparations and the TRC's Final Report, and how these two processes have situated the case of forced sterilization within the broader context of the internal armed conflict.

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Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars

Battling for (In)justice: Resurgent Authoritarianism, Ongoing Conflict, and Transitional Justice in the Arab Region

Transitional justice scholarship and practice has predominantly operated on the assumption that transitions entail a shift from violent, authoritarian rule to liberal, democratic rule.
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Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars

Amnesties and Inclusive Political Settlements

Amnesties are widely used during and after armed conflicts. Despite their controversial nature, international policymakers such as the UN continue to recognise some forms of amnesty in these settings are necessary to facilitate conflict resolution.
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Episode Information

Series
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars
People
Ñusta Carranza Ko
Keywords
peru
justice
transitional justice
indigenous rights
Department: Centre for Criminology
Date Added: 15/01/2019
Duration: 00:47:49

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