Dead Men Walking: Conversations on Global Norms and Institutions

Episode 3: Transitional Justice

44 min · 23. juni 2026
episode Episode 3: Transitional Justice cover

Description

In this third episode of "Dead Men Walking", we turn our attention to transitional justice. Has the promise of accountability after conflict reached a breaking point? Has the gap between what transitional justice aspires to deliver and what it actually achieves become untenable? Or is transitional justice more resilient and transformative than its critics argue? To examine these questions, IFIT Senior Research Specialist Dr. Jasmina Brankovic [https://ifit-transitions.org/experts/jasmina-brankovic/] sits down with three leading expert voices from IFIT's 400+ global network: Prof. Ron Slye, [https://ifit-transitions.org/experts/ron-slye/] Professor of Law at the Seattle University School of Law; Dr. Asli Ozcelik Olcay, [https://ifit-transitions.org/experts/asli-ozcelik-olcay/] Senior Lecturer in International Law at the University of Glasgow; and Javier Ciurlizza, [https://ifit-transitions.org/experts/javier-ciurlizza/] Ford Foundation’s director for the Andean Region. Together, they reflect on whether or not the idealistic assumptions and claims of transitional justice require adaptation to survive in the face of a changed conflict and rule of law landscape. "Dead Men Walking": Conversations on Global Norms and Institutions is a podcast series produced by the Institute for Integrated Transitions (IFIT) in collaboration with JusticeInfo.net. In each episode, we bring together leading thinkers and practitioners from IFIT's global expert network to take an honest look at the problems afflicting 20th century global norms and institutions and to consider the new ideas needed for a changing world order.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Dead Men Walking: Conversations on Global Norms and Institutions community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

4 episodes

episode Episode 3: Transitional Justice artwork

Episode 3: Transitional Justice

In this third episode of "Dead Men Walking", we turn our attention to transitional justice. Has the promise of accountability after conflict reached a breaking point? Has the gap between what transitional justice aspires to deliver and what it actually achieves become untenable? Or is transitional justice more resilient and transformative than its critics argue? To examine these questions, IFIT Senior Research Specialist Dr. Jasmina Brankovic [https://ifit-transitions.org/experts/jasmina-brankovic/] sits down with three leading expert voices from IFIT's 400+ global network: Prof. Ron Slye, [https://ifit-transitions.org/experts/ron-slye/] Professor of Law at the Seattle University School of Law; Dr. Asli Ozcelik Olcay, [https://ifit-transitions.org/experts/asli-ozcelik-olcay/] Senior Lecturer in International Law at the University of Glasgow; and Javier Ciurlizza, [https://ifit-transitions.org/experts/javier-ciurlizza/] Ford Foundation’s director for the Andean Region. Together, they reflect on whether or not the idealistic assumptions and claims of transitional justice require adaptation to survive in the face of a changed conflict and rule of law landscape. "Dead Men Walking": Conversations on Global Norms and Institutions is a podcast series produced by the Institute for Integrated Transitions (IFIT) in collaboration with JusticeInfo.net. In each episode, we bring together leading thinkers and practitioners from IFIT's global expert network to take an honest look at the problems afflicting 20th century global norms and institutions and to consider the new ideas needed for a changing world order.

23. juni 202644 min
episode Episode 2: International Law artwork

Episode 2: International Law

In this second episode of our new podcast, "Dead Men Walking", we turn our attention to international law. Has respect for international law reached a breaking point? Has the gap between the “law in books” and the “law in action” become too wide? Or is international law more stable and resilient than its critics want to believe? To help us think through these questions, IFIT Executive Director Mark Freeman sits down with three outstanding experts from IFIT's global network: Sarah Nouwen [https://ifit-transitions.org/experts/sarah-nouwen/], Professor of Public International Law at the European University Institute; Shaharzad Akbar [https://ifit-transitions.org/experts/shaharzad-akbar/], prominent Afghan human rights defender and Executive Director of Rawadari; and Thierry Cruvellier [https://www.justiceinfo.net/en/auteur/tcruvellier], Editor-in-Chief of Justice Info, the world's leading news website on international justice. “Dead Men Walking”: Conversations on Global Norms and Institutions is a new podcast series produced by the Institute for Integrated Transitions [https://ifit-transitions.org/] (IFIT) in collaboration with JusticeInfo.net [http://justiceinfo.net]. In each episode, we bring together leading thinkers and practitioners from IFIT’s 400+ global expert network to take an honest look at the problems afflicting 20th century global norms and institutions and to consider the new ideas needed for a changing world order.

26. apr. 202638 min
episode Episode 1: The International Criminal Court artwork

Episode 1: The International Criminal Court

In this first episode, we turn our attention to the International Criminal Court (ICC), one of the most embattled international institutions of our time. Is the ICC a bold but overextended experiment that was doomed from the start? A flawed but resilient institution finding its footing? Or a court caught in an impossible bind? To help us think through these questions, IFIT expert and peace mediator Barney Afako sits down with three leading experts in international justice from IFIT’s global network: Beth Van Schaack, former US Ambassador-at-Large for Global Criminal Justice; Janet Anderson, a veteran journalist who has covered international justice from Rwanda to Sierra Leone to The Hague; and Phil Clark, professor of international politics at SOAS University of London. Together they take a hard look at the ICC: its promise, its failures, and whether it can survive a world where the rules are being torn up in real time. “Dead Men Walking”: Conversations on Global Norms and Institutions is a new podcast series produced by the Institute for Integrated Transitions [https://ifit-transitions.org/] (IFIT) in collaboration with JusticeInfo.net [http://justiceinfo.net]. In each episode, we bring together leading thinkers and practitioners from IFIT’s global expert network to take an honest look at the institutions and norms that have underpinned the world order and to explore what needs to come next. Learn more about the ICC: https://www.icc-cpi.int/publications/factsheets [https://www.icc-cpi.int/publications/factsheets]

12. apr. 202649 min