Global Agenda Outlook 2013Published by World Economic Forum, Geneva,Switzerland, 2013 ISBN-13: 92-95044-51-7 / 978-92-95044-51-7
The 2013 Resource Governance IndexA Measure of Transparency and Accountability in the Oil, Gas and Mining Sector
Revenue Watch Institute
2013
Africa Competitiveness Report 2013The Africa Competitiveness Report 2013 is the result of collaboration among the World Economic Forum, the World Bank, the African Development Bank, and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark.
ISBN-10: 92-95044-44-4
ISBN-13: 978-92-95044-44-9
Copyright © 2013
Africa-BRICS CooperationImplications for Growth, Employment and Structural Transformation in Africa
United Nations Economic Commission for Africa
2013
Africa 2050 Realizing the Continent’s Full Potential
Development Challenges in Africa Towards 2050JICA
May 2013
The APRM 10 Years After: Reviewing a Decade of Peer Learning and Projecting a Future Developmental Governance of AfricaThe APRM 10 Years After: Reviewing a Decade of Peer Learning and Projecting a Future Developmental Governance of Africa
Policy Brief N°2
May 2013
Africa Governance Institute
Election-Related Disputes and Political ViolenceThe African Union Series
Report of the AU Panel of the Wise
July 2010
International Peace Institute
Sustainable Intensification: A New Paradigm for African AgricultureThe Montpellier Panel Report 2013
Pilar Domingo, Overseas Development Institute (ODI), May 2012, 111 Westminster Bridge Road, London, 11 pages.
Transitional justice (TJ) is firmly on the international agenda in post-conflict and post-repression settings. In March 2012 the International Criminal Court (ICC) found Thomas Lubanga guilty of human rights crimes in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and, the following month, Liberian ex-President, Charles Taylor, was convicted of crimes against humanity and war crimes by the Special Court for Sierra Leone. Alongside such high-profile court cases, other mechanisms for achieving transitional justice continue to evolve in a wide range of post-conflict and post-authoritarian contexts, including now stable countries, such as Spain. In fact, in countries with a legacy of violence, oppression or impunity for human rights abuses, there is now an almost automatic expectation that issues of redress, justice, and accountability will feature in the ensuing governance transition.......
This and other ODI Background Notes are available from www.odi.org.uk.
