Theorizing Transitional Justice
2 authors - Hardback
£135.00
Claudio Corradetti is research and teaching fellow at the Faculty of Law, University of Oslo. Corradetti holds a Doctorate in Political Theory from LUISS Rome, a Master of Philosophy from the University of London and a post-graduate Diploma in European Public Law from the European Group of Public Law, EPLO, Athens. He has been visiting at Cornell, Oxford, and the European University Institute, Florence. He was awarded a visiting research and teaching grant at McGill University, Montreal. He has published widely in books and international journals. Some of his most recent works include Corradetti, Claudio (2013). What does cultural difference require of human rights? In Cindy Holder & David A. Reidy (ed.), Human rights: the hard questions. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521176262. pp.136-150; C.Corradetti, (2013). Philosophical issues in transitional justice theory: a (provisional) balance. Politica e Società , Il Mulino, Bologna, pp. 185- 220. Nir Eisikovits received his Ph.D. in legal and political philosophy from Boston University in 2005; prior to that he studied law in Tel Aviv. He is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Suffolk University in Boston where he co-founded and directs the Graduate Program in Ethics and Public Policy. He writes primarily on political reconciliation, transitional justice and the ethics of war. Eisikovits is author of Sympathizing with the Enemy: Reconciliation, Transitional Justice, Negotiation (Brill and Republic of Letters, 2009), as well as the forthcoming Kill Me Tomorrow: A Theory of Truces (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015). Recent articles include 'Asymmetrical Warfare and Conscientious Objection' in the International Journal of Applied Philosophy (with Evan Feinhauer), 'Peace versus Justice in Transitional Settings' in Politica e Societa and a thoroughly revised and updated entry on ’Transitional Justice’ in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Nir will serve as guest editor of a forthcoming issue of Theoria on the