Apr 22 2026

Accountability Shock. Why Transitional Justice Prevents Criminal Wars in New Democracies

April 22, 2026

4:00 PM - 6:30 PM

Location

Institute for the Humanities, Behavioral Sciences Building 153

Address

1007 W. Harrison St, Chicago, IL 60607

Why do some countries that transition from authoritarian rule to democracy experience outbreaks of large-scale criminal violence and criminal wars while others develop relatively peacefully? In Accountability Shock. Why Transitional Justice Prevents Criminal Wars in New Democracies (Cambridge University Press), Juan Albarracín (UIC), Lucía Tiscornia (University College Dublin) and Guillermo Trejo (University of Notre Dame) demonstrate how robust transitional justice processes – combining truth commissions with prosecution of autocratic-era atrocities – prevent criminal violence in new democracies. By holding authoritarian specialists in violence accountable, new democracies can break state impunity, preventing them from becoming key actors in the production of large-scale criminal violence and reshaping the logic of state coercion in democracy. In this book presentation, Juan E. Méndez, Professor of Human Rights Law (Washington College of Law) and former UN Special Rapporteur on Torture (2010-2016) comments on the book’s findings and engages in conversation with its authors.

Contact

Juan Albarracín Dierolf

Date posted

Apr 1, 2026

Date updated

Apr 1, 2026