Periodic Reporting for period 4 - JustSites (The Global Sites of International Criminal Justice)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2023-07-01 do 2024-12-31
Taking the physical conditions and global relations of the justice sites as its main research objects, the project contributed frontier theoretical and empirical perspectives on how international criminal justice works in practice – as well as on why it often fails to work as intended. It also contributed tools that connect the justice sites to localised organisations in other fields. For instance, the justice sites often face obstacles defined by what the project calls ‘practice sites’, some of which are linked to states that are sceptical towards international criminal justice. Sites outside of the field of international criminal justice often work according to converging or oppositional logics. As such, the developed framework enables critical studies of how international criminal justice is situated in a larger global space characterised by competing norms and goals, including those linked to state interests or to other stakeholders involved in defining distinct forms of justice, peace, and security at the domestic and global levels.
Contributing the first investigation of the wider constellation of justice sites is not only of scientific value. It is crucial for understanding the wider social, legal and political impact, or lack thereof, of this field of law. As such, the results produced by the project are also of importance for practitioners working in different justice sites, as well as for policy makers and stakeholders that design future responses to atrocity crimes or plan wider efforts to create lasting peace and security.
So far, the main results of the project have been published in scholarly outlets, on blogs and communicated at conferences. The research output builds on collected datasets to produce original perspectives on international criminal justice. For instance, JustSites publications have analyzed the linkages and differences between sites focused narrowly on international criminal justice and sites invested more broadly in transitional justice and policing. These results contextualize the collective work that takes place in the sites of justice and demonstrate how the relations between them are embodied, for instance, in different types of professional power. These forms of professional power are closely linked to particular normative perspectives on what forms of justice are perceived as most valuable. Contributing new perspectives on the forms of professional and symbolic power that characterize relations between the sites of justice, the results pave the way for future studies of how the larger constellation of justice sites has developed over time and what effects it has had on the effort to end impunity as well as on other social, legal and political initiatives.
In the coming years, JustSites results will build on progress made beyond the state of the art in at least two ways: First of all, JustSites researchers will contribute deeper studies of how the specific power relations between agents in distinct sites of justice work and develop. The JustSites project employs three PhD and two postdoc researchers who all focus on specific such relations. Second of all, JustSites research, primarily that of the principal investigator, will contribute frontier perspectives on the larger constellation of justice sites, its power dynamics and how they have evolved over time. Such contributions will demonstrate how the constellation of justice sites was affected by larger global transformations and how the constellation itself has effects in the world.