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Challenges of Postconflict Coexistence: Narrating Truth and Justice in a Bosnian Town
Author(s) -
Mannergren Selimovic Johanna
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
political psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.419
H-Index - 95
eISSN - 1467-9221
pISSN - 0162-895X
DOI - 10.1111/pops.12205
Subject(s) - narrative , tribunal , transitional justice , bosnian , sociology , economic justice , politics , law , criminology , political science , literature , linguistics , philosophy , art
This article sets out to deepen our understanding of how people make everyday strategies for living together after mass atrocities and what role transitional justice may play for these strategies. Based on a study in the small town of F oča in B osnia‐ H erzegovina, the analysis unpacks the encounter between three clusters of narratives that make competing moral claims and offer different ways of ordering the past, present, and future: the “institutional” narrative formed globally at various institutions of transitional justice and here represented in the local by the International Criminal Tribunal for Former Y ugoslavia ( ICTY ); the collective narratives of ethnonationalism constructed by entrepreneurs in politics and media and fed into daily discourses; and individual narratives “in the margins” that refuse collective categorizations. The article argues that the ICTY narrative, based on individual justice and factual truth, was, contrary to its aims, used to enforce exclusionist and collective claims. At the same time, less dominant narratives embraced the ICTY narrative, which suggests that the tribunal may potentially play a constructive role as an “archive for the future.”

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