Obstructed Engangement with Past Acts of State Violence Among Urban Youth in Post-Conflict Cambodia
Main Article Content
Abstract
Abstract
Article Details
The views, opinions, and pictures expressed in this journal are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions and viewpoints of the editor and the editorial board. All rights are reserved by the authors and the Institute of Human Rights and Peace Studies of Mahidol University. No part of this journal may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior permission in writing from the journal’s editor, or as expressly permitted by law, or under terms agreed with the appropriate reprographics rights organization. Non-commercial use of information in this journal must be properly referenced.
References
dence of Power and Principle. Transitional Justice in the
Asia-Pacific. 125-156.
Bagot-Jewitt, C., (2011). “Unpicking some threads of remembrance”
In Lest We Forget: Remembrance & Commemoration,
Andrews, M., & Bagot-Jewitt (eds.). New York: The History
Press.
Bickford, L., (2004). Transitional Justice. The Encyclopedia of Geno-
cide and Crimes Against Humanity. Vol. 3.
Brounéus, K., (2009). “Reconciliation and Development”, In Building
a future on peace and justice: studies on transitional justice,
conflict resolution and development : the Nuremberg Decla-
ration on Peace and Justice, Mbos, K., Large, J., & Wierda,
M. (eds.). Berlin: Springer.
Chandler, D., (2008). A history of Cambodia. Boulder Colo: Westview
Press.
Charmaz, K. (2005). “Grounded Theory in the 21st Century: Applica-
tions for Advancing Social Justice Studies. “, In Denzin, N.
K. & Lincoln, Y. S. (Eds), The Sage Handbook of Qualita-
tive Research (3rd ed.), 507-535, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Publications Ltd.
Charmaz, K. (2006). Constructing Grounded Theory: A Practical
Guide Through Qualitative Analysis. London: Sage Publica-
tions.
Ciorciari, J. D., & Heindel, A. H., (2014). “Experiments in Inter-
national Criminal Justice: Lessons from the Khmer Rouge
Tribunal”, Michigan Journal of International Law. 35, 369-
442.
De Greiff, P., (2016). Unacknowledged Past Breeds Manipulation
and Fear. [online] available at:
16 September 2016].
Duggan, C. (2010). “Editorial Note”, In: The International Journal
of Transitional Justice: Special Issue: Transitional Justice on
Trial - Evaluating Its Impact, Vol. 4, 2010, 315-328.
Fischer, M. (2011). “Transitional Justice and Reconciliation:
Theory and Practice”, In: Advancing Conflict Transformation:
The Berghof Handbook II, B. Austin, M. Fischer, H. J.
Giessmann, B. Budrich (eds.), p 405 – 430.
Glaser, B. G., & Strauss A. L. (1967). The Discovery of Ground-
ed Theory: Strategies for Qualitative Research. Chicago:
Aldine Pub. Co.
Khamboly Dy., (2007). A history of Democratic Kampuchea (1975-
1979). Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Documentation Center of
Cambodia.
Khamboly Dy., (2015). Genocide education in Cambodia local ini-
tiatives, global connections.
Kiernan, B., (2003). The demography of genocide in Southeast Asia
The deaths tolls in Cambodia, 1975-79, and East Timor, 1975-
80. In: Critical Asian Studies, 35, 585-597.
Kiernan, B., (2005). The Pol Pot regime: race, power, and genocide
in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, 1975-79.
Mason, J. (2002). Qualitative researching. London: Sage Publica-
tions.
McGonigle, B. N. (2009). Two for the Price of One: Attempts by
the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia to
Combine Retributive and Restorative Justice Principles.
Leiden Journal of International Law. 22, 127-149.
Mersky, M., (2016). Who decides Whether to Remember or Forget?
[online] available at:
Mills, J., Bonner, A., & Francis, K. (2006). “The Development of
Constructivist Grounded Theory” International Journal of
Qualitative Methods, 5(1), [online] available at:
16 September 2016].
Minow, M. (1998). Between Vengeance and Forgiveness. Boston.
Beacon Press.
Nouwen, S. M. H. and Werner, W. G. (2015). “Monopolizing Global
Justice: International Criminal Law as Challenge to Human
Diversity.”, Journal of International Criminal Justice, 13,
157-176.
Olsen, T. D., Payne, L. A., & Reiter, A. G. (2010). The Justice
Balance: when Transitional Justice improves Human Rights
and Democracy. Human Rights Quarterly: a Comparative
and International Journal of the Social Sciences, Philosophy,
and Law, 32, 980-1007.
Osborne, M. E. (2013). Southeast Asia: an introductory history.
Sydney, George Allen & Unwin.
Pham, P. N., Balthazard, M., H’an Sukhum & Vinck, P. (2011). After
the First Trial: A Population-Based Survey on Knowledge
and Perceptions of Justice and the Extraordinary Chambers
in the Courts of Cambodia. Human Rights Center, University
of California, Berkeley.
Ralph, N., Birks, M., & Chapman, Y. (2015). The Methodological
Dynamism of Grounded Theory. International Journal of
Qualitative Methods, 1-6.
Rieff, D. (2016a). Remembrance: An Ally of Justice, but No Friend
to Peace. [online] available at:
September 2016].
Rieff, D. (2016b). In praise of forgetting: historical memory and its
Ironies. New Haven, Yale University Press.
Sriram, C. L., Martin-Ortega, O., & Herman, J. (2010). War, conflict
and human rights: theory and practice. London: Routledge.
Tarling, N. (1992). The Cambridge history of Southeast Asia: Vol-
ume 2 : the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Cambridge
[England], Cambridge University Press.
Teitel, R. G. (2003). Transitional justice genealogy. Harvard Human
Rights Journal, 16, 69-94.
Thoms, Oskar N. T., Ron J., & Roland Paris. (2008). The Effects of
Transitional Justice Mechanisms. A Summary of Empirical
Research Findings and Implications for Analysts and Prac-
titioners. Working paper. Centre for International Policy
Studies: University of Ottawa.
United Nations Statistics Division, (2016). Population by age, sex and
Urban/rural residence. [online] available at:
September 2016].
Visoka, G. (2016). “Arrested Truth: Transitional Justice and the
Politics of Remembrance in Kosovo” Journal of Human
Rights Practice, 1-19.
Wisker, G. (2008). The postgraduate research handbook: succeed
with your MA, MPhil, EdD and PhD. New York: Palgrave
Macmillan.