Book contents
- Navigating Local Transitional Justice
- African Studies Series
- Navigating Local Transitional Justice
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Maps
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Agency in Times of Transitional Justice
- 2 Navigating Violence, Peace and Justice
- 3 Deconstructing Fambul Tok’s Discourse and Practice
- 4 Participant Experiences with Fambul Tok’s Program
- 5 Unrecognized Mechanisms, Normality and Everyday Realities in Transition
- 6 Activating Justice
- Appendix A: Informant Interview List
- References
- Index
- African Studies Series
5 - Unrecognized Mechanisms, Normality and Everyday Realities in Transition
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 July 2023
- Navigating Local Transitional Justice
- African Studies Series
- Navigating Local Transitional Justice
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Maps
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Agency in Times of Transitional Justice
- 2 Navigating Violence, Peace and Justice
- 3 Deconstructing Fambul Tok’s Discourse and Practice
- 4 Participant Experiences with Fambul Tok’s Program
- 5 Unrecognized Mechanisms, Normality and Everyday Realities in Transition
- 6 Activating Justice
- Appendix A: Informant Interview List
- References
- Index
- African Studies Series
Summary
This chapter moves beyond Fambul Tok and looks at how processes of transition and justice occur outside of the official scope and discourse, or through what I refer to as unrecognized mechanisms. I problematize the notion of transition, looking again at the official transitional justice discourses and contrast these with interview narratives that demonstrate the fluidity of conflict and post-conflict periods. The chapter further examines how unrecognized mechanisms that were employed by Sierra Leoneans served as more meaningful avenues of ‘transitioning’ past their war-related experiences. Individuals engaged in everyday activities, such as economic restoration, agriculture and religion in an effort to transition to what I call a new normal. The importance of the everyday and re-obtaining a sense of normality were key priorities. Individuals, therefore, define and enact their own ideas of what it means to transition, engaging with alternative, often more immediate and pragmatic, channels within their existing social structures to reach their own defined goals. Using Sierra Leone as an example, this chapter demonstrates how individuals in post-conflict societies are active agents in defining and facilitating their own post-conflict processes, thereby recognizing the unrecognized and understanding notions of transition and justice at work.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Navigating Local Transitional JusticeAgency at Work in Post-Conflict Sierra Leone, pp. 134 - 157Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023