Retributive or reparative justice? Explaining post-conflict preferences in Kenya

Author:

Aloyo Eamon1ORCID,Dancy Geoff2ORCID,Dutton Yvonne3

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Security and Global Affairs (The Hague), Leiden University

2. Department of Political Science, Tulane University

3. Robert H McKinney School of Law, Indiana University

Abstract

In states emerging from mass violence and human rights abuses, do individuals prefer retributive punishment of perpetrators through trials, or do they wish to be compensated with land or monetary reparations for their injuries? How does the concrete option of prosecutions by the International Criminal Court (ICC) moderate these preferences? Using unique survey data from 507 Kenyans collected in 2015, we build on and add nuance to the empirical literature that interrogates the link between exposure to mass violence and post-conflict justice preferences. We find that while some individuals prefer reparative justice, victims and witnesses generally want perpetrators to be prosecuted. Even for those who are co-ethnics of government leaders – who allegedly instigated widespread killing, sexual assaults and displacements – direct exposure to those acts leads to greater desire for prosecutions. We further find that one’s personal experience with violence also leads one to reject domestic justice in favor of international justice: victims and witnesses who favored retributive justice are highly likely to believe that the ICC is the best option for prosecuting perpetrators.

Funder

The Hague Institute for Global Justice

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Safety Research,Sociology and Political Science

Reference85 articles.

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3. Determinants of Attitudes Toward Transitional Justice

4. Justice in the Hague, Peace in the Former Yugoslavia? A Commentary on the United Nations War Crimes Tribunal

5. What Justice for the Yazidi Genocide?: Voices from Below

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