Human Rights in Transition: Jan Knippers Black

Click here to download interview in MP3 format. [middmedia pleroyantaki Commons-MIIS-web_data-middlebury-edu Jan Black Interview.mp3] This hour long Policy Pace program is an exceptional opportunity to delve into issues of justice and history with Jan Knippers Black, a professor at MIIS dedicated to improving human rights.  Professor Black describes issues, events, and dignitaries who are involved in Amnesty International, gives us her definition of transitional justice, and guides us through recent successes and challenges to human rights especially in Chile. Ms. Black and host Paula LeRoy share perspectives about the plight of the Mapuche people in Chile as experienced on the Global Majority sponsored J-term trip for MIIS students.  Making complexity simple, Jan suggests recent history can be understood by reading 1984, Brave New World and watching the movie Brazil. The interview continues with an in depth exploration of transitional justice, truth telling, reconciliation, conflict resolution, and the repercussions for society when perpetrators are not brought to justice. Ms. Black eloquently explains how periods of transition are periods of great hope and of great fear while highlighting issues about equity that invoke fear. In comparing South Africa’s process to Liberia’s to Sierra Leone to Chile’s, the intricacies of transitional justice are described that can make the difference between true transition and ineffective transitions. In her gentle yet direct way, Ms. Black indicates US culpability and lack of truth telling. US pressures to expand empire, the casual acceptance of failure, unworkable structures that lead the state of constant war, and unwillingness to probe the truth are laid open. Returning to the issues of Chile, a discussion of the empowerment of bullies that occurs during dictatorships such as Pinochet’s is enlightening. Presently, student protests and indigenous communities are met with bully tactics, militarism, and anti-terrorism legislation, which begs the question “Is democracy or dictatorship the “normal” state of affairs?” The interview concludes with a look at Jan’s career as a radical, her continuing work, and hopes for her students as they swim upstream.

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Transitional Justice, Moral Dilemmas and Global Majority

CUNY philosophy professor and Global Majority Board Member Michael Buckley, defines transitional justice as not just about criminality but truth telling, reparations, institutional reform and various concepts of  justice.  While providing examples of moral dilemmas and issues in justice, Michael connects political justice to economic justice and to business ethics.

The interview by Policy Pace host Paula LeRoy, is taped during a Global Majority trip in Chile that brought 24 students to study transitional justice with reknown Judge Guzman, MIIS professor Jan Black, and dissidents in the Mapuche Communities.  Michael describes the goals of Global Majority and its commitment to peaceful resolution, education, and promotion of negotiation techniques.

Throughout the interview, the background of Chile’s struggle for justice after the repression of the horrendous Pinochet dictatorship blends theory with practice.

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Nuances of Transitional Justice from Judge Juan Guzman

The honorable Judge Juan Guzman, the judge who brought Augusto Pinochet to justice, lectured at Monterey Institute of International Studies. He explains legal steps, concepts and caveats, especially related to transitional justice in Chile and Rwanda. With humor and clarity he answers questions about the ICC, bringing other high level bureaucrats to justice and the obstacles to justice. Paula LeRoy, IPS Security and Development graduate student, and producer of Policy Pace radio show, recorded and narrates the interview, November 2011. Introductions by Professor Jan Black and CA Assemblyman Bill Monning are not included in this recording due to length. A video of the presentation is also available on Midd Media

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