Abstract

This chapter serves to reflect on the contribution made by local civil society to transitional justice processes in Africa and map out the varied roles they play in promoting, challenging and reframing these processes in their own contexts. It seeks to situate civil society agendas against the backdrop of complex colonial legacies and deeply politicised state and international agendas. By creatively navigating this landscape, civil society has sought to shape transformative agendas for transitions and devise targeted strategies for concrete and incremental change to address the needs of particular constituencies.

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