Pablo de Greiff

  • Senior Fellow
  • Adjunct Professor of Law
Assistant: Brianne Cuffe
  brianne.cuffe@nyu.edu       212.998.6714
Pablo de Greiff

Pablo de Greiff was appointed by the UN Human Rights Council to serve as the first Special Rapporteur on the promotion of truth, justice, reparation, and guarantees of non-recurrence in 2012. He was renewed in 2015 and will hold the position until May 2018. In January 2015 he was also asked to be part of UNIIB, a mission of Independent Experts to address the situation in Burundi. He is currently Senior Fellow and Director of the Transitional Justice Program at the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice of the School of Law at NYU. Prior to joining NYU he was the Director of Research at the International Center for Transitional Justice from 2001 to 2014. Born in Colombia, he graduated from Yale University (BA) and from Northwestern University (PhD). Before joining ICTJ, he was an associate professor with tenure in the Philosophy department at the State University of New York at Buffalo, where he taught ethics and political theory. He was Laurance S. Rockefeller fellow at the Center for Human Values, Princeton University, and held a concurrent fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities. De Greiff is the editor or coeditor of ten books, including Jürgen Habermas’s The Inclusion of the Other (MIT Press, 1998), Global Justice and Transnational Politics (MIT Press, 2002), Las Razones de la Justicia A Festschrift for Thomas McCarthy (México: UNAM, 2006), and in areas related to transitional justice, The Handbook of Reparations (Oxford, 2006), Transitional Justice and Development: Making Connections (SSRC, 2009), and Disarming the Past: Transitional Justice and Ex-combatants (SSRC, 2010), among others. De Greiff has published extensively on transitions to democracy, democratic theory, and the relationship between morality, politics, and law, and is in the board of editors of the International Journal of Transitional Justice and of several book series related to the topic. His latest articles include: “Truth without facts.’ On the Erosion of the Fact-Finding Function of Truth Commissions,” in The Transformation of Human Rights Fact-Finding, Philip Alston & Sarah Knuckey, eds., (New York: Oxford University Press, 2015). “Transitional Justice and Development,” in International Development, Bruce Currie-Alder, Ravi Kanbur, David Malone and Rohinton Medhora, eds., (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014). “On Making the Invisible Visible: The Role of Cultural Interventions in Transitional Justice Processes,” in, Transitional Justice, Culture, and Society Clara Ramírez-Barat, ed., (New York: Social Sciences Research Council, 2014). “El papel de las cortes constitucionales en la regulación de conflictos,” in Diálogos Constitucionales de Colombia con el Mundo¸ Juan Carlos Henao, ed. (Bogotá: Corte Constitucional de Colombia y Universidad Externado de Colombia, 2013). “Theorizing Transitional Justice,” in Transitional Justice, Melissa Williams, Rosemary Nagy, and Jon Elster, eds. NOMOS, vol. LI (New York: New York University Press, 2012). He has lectured extensively, including at Yale, Harvard, Columbia, Cornell, NYU, the European University Institute, and universities across Europe and Latin America. De Greiff contributed to the drafting of the final report of the Stockholm Initiative on DDR, authored the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights’ Rule-of-Law Tools for Post-Conflict States: Reparations Programmes and was an advisor to the World Bank on the process leading to the World Development Report 2011: Conflict, Security, and Development. He has been an advisor to different transitional justice bodies in Peru, Guatemala, Morocco, Colombia, and the Philippines. As Special Rapporteur he has presented thematic reports to the Human Rights Council and to the General Assembly on each of the pillars of his mandate and on the relationship between transitional justice, development, and the rule of law, among others. Additionally, he has presented country visit reports on Tunisia, Spain, Uruguay, and Burundi. (Reports are available at http://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/TruthJusticeReparation/Pages/Index.aspx) De Greiff is on the Advisory Board of the Open Society’s Justice Initiative, and of the International Center for Transitional Justice.

Courses

  • Case Studies in Transitional Justice Seminar: Writing Credit
  • Topics in Transitional Justice Seminar

    This seminar follows a general introduction to transitional justice taught in the Fall. It is organized around recent challenges faced by the field. These can be framed in terms of objections, as follows. The charges are that transitional justice is: insufficiently attuned to the importance of peace; insufficiently prepared to adopt a more transformative conception of justice; insufficiently sensitive to gender considerations; insufficiently sensitive to context (in the end, an expression of false universality). The seminar will examine these challenges with an eye to deciding which deserve to be taken seriously and how the component measures of a comprehensive transitional justice policy could be modified in order to respond to them.

  • Topics in Transitional Justice Seminar: Writing Credit
  • Transitional Justice

    This course offers an introduction to the field of transitional justice. Although its main approach will not be historical, the seminar will examine the emergence of the field and of the notion of a comprehensive or holistic transitional justice policy, considering the factors that can explain that development. While paying some attention to the legal basis and to issues related to the design and implementation of each of the main constituent elements of such a policy (criminal justice, truth, reparations, and guarantees of non-recurrence), the course will be interested in exploring the relationship between these measures. Transitional justice has consolidated and 'normalized' in a fairly short period of time, which is a considerable achievement. The seminar, however, will pay particular attention to some of the challenges the field is facing today. We will therefore discuss questions about the scope and the reach of transitional justice (how effective is it in redressing different types of violations?), as well as issues concerning the fit of the policy to the various contexts in which it is presently implemented, paying especial attention to the way the model has migrated from post authoritarian to post conflict transitions.

  • Transitional Justice: Writing Credit
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