Category
page 1Transitional justice
comfort woman
military sexual slavery system designed and implemented by Japan Empire from early 1930s until the end of World War II, or the victims who were forced into sexual slavery by the Japanese military

lustration
thumb|Lustration map of Europe, with green representing some form of lustration; pink no lustration; and grey not a former Warsaw Pact member
Lustration in Central and Eastern Europe is the official public procedure of scrutinizing a public official or a candidate for public office in terms of their history as a witting confidential collaborator (informant) of relevant former communist secret police, an activity widely condemned by the public opinion of those states as morally corrupt due to its essential role in suppressing political opposition and enabling persecution of dissidents. Surfacin
Institute of National Remembrance
Polish government-affiliated research institute with lustration prerogatives and prosecution powers
transitional justice
judicial and non-judicial measures implemented in order to redress legacies of human rights abuses or segments of past injustices
legal remedy
enforcement of legal rights or penalties by a court

Association for Social Research and Communications (UDIK)
UDIK (Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: УДИК), officially known as the Association for Social Research and Communication (Serbo-Croatian: Udruženje za društvena istraživanja i komunikacije/ Удружење за друштвена истраживања и комуникације), is a Bosnian non-governmental organization with offices in Sarajevo and Brčko. It was founded in 2013 by Edvin Kanka Ćudić. The organization aimed to gather facts, documents, and data on genocide, war crimes, and human rights violations in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the former Yugoslavia.
Purges in Turkey 2016/17
series of purges by the Government of Turkey in reaction to the July 15th, 2016 failed coup d'état
Hawaiian sovereignty movement
grassroots movement to gain self-determination and rule for Hawaiians

nisei
is a Japanese-language term used in countries in North America and South America to specify the ethnically Japanese children born in the new country to Japanese-born immigrants, or . The , or second generation, in turn are the parents of the , or third generation. These Japanese-language terms derive from , "one, two, three", the ordinal numbers used with sei (see Japanese numerals). Though nisei means "second-generation immigrant", it more specifically often refers to the children of the initial diaspora, occurring during the period of the Empire of Japan in the late 19th and early 20th centu
Yuri Kochiyama
American civil rights activist (1921-2014)
Fred Korematsu
Japanese-American interned during World War II
Gacaca court
system of community justice used in Rwanda after the 1994 genocide
World Conference against Racism 2001
United Nations conference
Maher Arar
telecommunications engineer
memorialization
Memorialization is the process of preserving memories, especially the collective memory, of people or events. It can be a form of a memorial, and address or petition, or a ceremony of remembrance or commemoration.
Alex Boraine
South African politician (1931–2018)
International Center for Transitional Justice
American nonprofit (2001-)
Radbruch formula
legal theory
De-Ba'athification
thumb|250x250px|One of the earliest manifestations of de-Ba'athification in Iraq was the destruction of imagery associated with Saddam Hussein
'''De-Ba'athification (; sometimes called de-Saddamization''') refers to a policy undertaken in Iraq by the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) and subsequent Iraqi governments to remove the Iraqi Ba'ath Party's influence in the new Iraqi political system after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003. It was considered by the CPA to be Ba'athist Iraq's equivalent to Nazi Germany's denazification after World War II. It was first outlined in CPA Order 1 which ent
Right to truth
right for victims to know what happened
Hekima University College
Jesuit school of theology in Nairobi, Kenya