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JusticeInfo concentrates its attention to such transitional justice ("TJ") affairs as major crimes trials,
truth commissions, remembrance, reconciliation initiatives,
reparations programs, and
universal jurisdiction.[3][6][7][10] The enterprise combines the "expertise of academics and journalists [working in] Transitional Justice (TJ)," to join "real time journalistic coverage," with "policy advice and academic analysis [about] TJ processes on a global scale."[8]—with the goal of informing, guiding and empowering actual TJ activity, around the world.[3][6][7][10]
The
World Justice Project describes JusticeInfo as "the leading news website [about] transitional justice."[11]
According to a July 2018 interview with departing JusticeInfo Editor-in-Chief François Sergent, conducted by the outlet's sponsor, Hirondelle Foundation, initial development of the site was "difficult," owing to limited funds, bi-lingual content, and the geographic dispersion of its editorial staff (creating challenges for "editorial management" and depriving the team of newsroom synergy).[13]
In July 2018, the leadership of JusticeInfo was handed over to new leaders "more oriented towards the digital."[13]
Business
JusticeInfo is headquartered in
Lausanne, Switzerland—with key operations in
France, and content contributors in many other countries, on four continents.[3][6]
JusticeInfo does not carry advertising, and is supported by donations and grants.[3][12]
The Hirondelle Foundation also provides similar and related information through its
Hirondelle News Agency, and creates — or provides support to — independent, civic-minded news media based or operating in crisis, conflict, and post-conflict zones.[3][5][6][8]
Distribution and use
JusticeInfo is solely an online, digital medium, on the internet at justiceinfo.net
[4],[5] openly and freely accessible to all.[3][1]
JusticeInfo, through a procedure, allows its original articles and videos to be freely republished by others, at no charge, under the
Creative Commons License.[14]
In its subject areas, JusticeInfo is a reference frequently linked to, copied, quoted or cited, globally, by...
The site's initial Editor-in-Chief was François Sergent,[7][13][49] former reporter, foreign correspondent and deputy editor for Libération (1981-2015),[10][49] and former head of its foreign service.[2]
His IJT co-founder, Franck Petit — editorial board member for
Amnesty International’s Chronicle in France — is the JusticeInfo deputy editor-in-chief. Sylvain Olivri leads website development.[3]
Staff
The site lists and displays dozens of authors and correspondents from around the world, particularly in Europe and Africa, notably including:
Janet H Anderson is a JusticeInfo correspondent at
The Hague. She has reported on international justice for several decades, including cases regarding
Rwanda,
Sierra Leone, and
Uganda She trains and assists locally based journalists who cover atrocity crimes trials, and is vice president for the Association of Journalists at the
ICC. She has written for The Guardian.[3][65]
^
abHaski, Pierre:
"JusticeInfo.net, a site on justice in societies in transition," June 18, 2015, updated November 21, 2016, L'Obs, (translated from the
original French); (notes: "A new site... launched... Wednesday, in French and English [about] transitional justice issues in countries [which] experienced dictatorships or civil wars"); retrieved August 6, 2022
^
abc"ICC Registrar delivers keynote speech at “JusticeInfo.Net” website launch," May 7-9, 2014, ICC Weekly Update #209, ICC-PIDS-WU-209/14_Eng,
International Criminal Court,
The Hague, The
Netherlands, retrieved December 12, 2022. (notes: "On 6 May 2014, the Registrar of the International Criminal Court (ICC)... gave a keynote speech at the launch of a “JusticeInfo.Net”, a new media platform focusing on transitional justice. The event was held by Fondation Hirondelle and the Embassy of Switzerland in The Hague at the ICC’s premises. Speakers... included... Professor Pierre Hazan (Universities of Geneva and Neuchâtel),...")
^
abcdefghi"Pierre Hazan," "Experts," Institute for Integrated Transitions, Barcelona, Spain. Retrieved November 20, 2022.
^
abcdefghEtter, Jean-Marie (CEO Fondation Hirondelle), Pierre Hazan, (Head of Project Justiceinfo.net), and François Sergent, (Editor in Chief Justiceinfo.net): press release:
"Justiceinfo.Net Takes Up The Challenge," July 2nd, 2015, PierreHazan.com Retrieved November 20, 2022.
^
abcBurnand, Frederic:
"The non-miraculous virtues of transitional justice," June 23, 2015, Swissinfo on tvsvissera.it, 2015 (English, translated from
original Italian); retrieved December 15, 2022; (notes; "Since [establishment] of the
International Criminal Court... international justice has developed to [assist] war-affected societies [to] rebuild. [Concurrently, methods like] truth and reconciliation commissions [support or supplant] judicial [action] to heal... wounds... still open. To [make] this [clearer], Pierre Hazan, [a] specialist [at] responses to mass crimes,... launched a bilingual site (French/English) [in conjunction] with François Sergent, [a] former journalist [for] Libération, [plus] Jean-Marie Etter, director general... Hirondelle Foundation. [The site focuses] on legal, political, [and especially] human issues... to help assailants and victims... coexist as peacefully as possible, [after conflict]...")
^"JusticeInfo.net," "Universal Periodic Review: 7–18 November 2022," Conference primer: Human Rights Council, "Commons," United Nations (
Chile) — citing multiple JusticeInfo, articles on
Ukraine, Retrieved November 20, 2022.
^Guide de l’étudiant 2018 - 2019 (Guide to the Student, 2018-2016,"), Master Arts visuels , HEAD – Genève (Haute école d'art et de design / University of Art and Design); (notes, in the section, "Cycle Master: Département Arts visuels: CCC Research Master and PhD-Forum – Critical Curatorial Cybernetic Contemporary Research Studies", the subsection "Faculty," sub-subsection "Professors," lists "Pierre Hazan."); retrieved December 11, 2022
^A/HRC/25/49: "Report on memorization processes in post-conflict and divided societies," January 23, 2014,
United Nations Special Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights; delivered March 2014, to the
U.N. Human Rights Council, 25th session, (notes: "...the Special Rapporteur held an expert meeting... see... statements from the experts invited: ...Mr. Pierre Hazan, Co-Director of the PIMPA research project ('Politics of Memory and Art Practices: The Role of Art in Peace and Reconstruction Processes'), Geneva University of Art and Design.") Retrieved December 12, 2022
^
abannouncement: "Online Workshop: Peace Talks: Reconciliation After Conflict," May 14, 2021,
Bocconi University, retrieved December 12, 2022. (notes: "How to reconcile a country [following] civil conflict?...In this “Peace-Talk”... two great experts..., Prof. Oeindrila Dube... and Mr. Pierre Hazan... discuss this issue... He... advised international organizations, governments... armed groups on... justice, amnesty, reparation, truth commission, [as well as] forced disappearances, international humanitarian law... human rights. He... worked with... Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights... collaborated with.. United Nations in the Balkans. ...member of... International Contact Group on... Basque Conflict, which co-organized... Peace Conference leading to... end of political violence in... Basque country. ...worked in many conflict zones... Africa... Balkans... Middle East... Europe.")
^
ab"François Sergent, journalist: Biography,"Akadem, retrieved December 13, 2022; (translated from
original French); (notes: "François Sergent is a journalist. ...at Liberation from 1981 to 2015 [as] a reporter, [foreign] correspondent... and deputy editor... [He later became] editor-in-chief of justiceinfo.net... (2015-2018).")
^
abcd"Thierry Cruvellier,"NiemanReports,Nieman Foundation,
Harvard University, retrieved December 13, 2022; (notes: "Thierry Cruvellier... 2004 Nieman Fellow... former editor... International Justice Tribune. ...covered... International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda... 1997 [through] 2002, and... Special Court and... Truth and Reconciliation Commission [for] Sierra Leone in 2003.")
This is a draft
Articles for creation (AfC) submission. It is not currently pending review. While there are
no deadlines, abandoned drafts may be deleted after six months. To edit the draft click on the "Edit" tab at the top of the window.
If you need help editing or submitting your draft, please ask us a question at the AfC Help Desk or get live help from experienced editors. These venues are only for help with editing and the submission process, not to get reviews.
If you need feedback on your draft, or if the review is taking a lot of time, you can try asking for help on the
talk page of a
relevant WikiProject. Some WikiProjects are more active than others so a speedy reply is not guaranteed.
To improve your odds of a faster review, tag your draft with relevant
WikiProject tags using the button below. This will let reviewers know a new draft has been submitted in their area of interest. For instance, if you wrote about a female astronomer, you would want to add the Biography, Astronomy, and Women scientists tags.
JusticeInfo concentrates its attention to such transitional justice ("TJ") affairs as major crimes trials,
truth commissions, remembrance, reconciliation initiatives,
reparations programs, and
universal jurisdiction.[3][6][7][10] The enterprise combines the "expertise of academics and journalists [working in] Transitional Justice (TJ)," to join "real time journalistic coverage," with "policy advice and academic analysis [about] TJ processes on a global scale."[8]—with the goal of informing, guiding and empowering actual TJ activity, around the world.[3][6][7][10]
The
World Justice Project describes JusticeInfo as "the leading news website [about] transitional justice."[11]
According to a July 2018 interview with departing JusticeInfo Editor-in-Chief François Sergent, conducted by the outlet's sponsor, Hirondelle Foundation, initial development of the site was "difficult," owing to limited funds, bi-lingual content, and the geographic dispersion of its editorial staff (creating challenges for "editorial management" and depriving the team of newsroom synergy).[13]
In July 2018, the leadership of JusticeInfo was handed over to new leaders "more oriented towards the digital."[13]
Business
JusticeInfo is headquartered in
Lausanne, Switzerland—with key operations in
France, and content contributors in many other countries, on four continents.[3][6]
JusticeInfo does not carry advertising, and is supported by donations and grants.[3][12]
The Hirondelle Foundation also provides similar and related information through its
Hirondelle News Agency, and creates — or provides support to — independent, civic-minded news media based or operating in crisis, conflict, and post-conflict zones.[3][5][6][8]
Distribution and use
JusticeInfo is solely an online, digital medium, on the internet at justiceinfo.net
[4],[5] openly and freely accessible to all.[3][1]
JusticeInfo, through a procedure, allows its original articles and videos to be freely republished by others, at no charge, under the
Creative Commons License.[14]
In its subject areas, JusticeInfo is a reference frequently linked to, copied, quoted or cited, globally, by...
The site's initial Editor-in-Chief was François Sergent,[7][13][49] former reporter, foreign correspondent and deputy editor for Libération (1981-2015),[10][49] and former head of its foreign service.[2]
His IJT co-founder, Franck Petit — editorial board member for
Amnesty International’s Chronicle in France — is the JusticeInfo deputy editor-in-chief. Sylvain Olivri leads website development.[3]
Staff
The site lists and displays dozens of authors and correspondents from around the world, particularly in Europe and Africa, notably including:
Janet H Anderson is a JusticeInfo correspondent at
The Hague. She has reported on international justice for several decades, including cases regarding
Rwanda,
Sierra Leone, and
Uganda She trains and assists locally based journalists who cover atrocity crimes trials, and is vice president for the Association of Journalists at the
ICC. She has written for The Guardian.[3][65]
^
abHaski, Pierre:
"JusticeInfo.net, a site on justice in societies in transition," June 18, 2015, updated November 21, 2016, L'Obs, (translated from the
original French); (notes: "A new site... launched... Wednesday, in French and English [about] transitional justice issues in countries [which] experienced dictatorships or civil wars"); retrieved August 6, 2022
^
abc"ICC Registrar delivers keynote speech at “JusticeInfo.Net” website launch," May 7-9, 2014, ICC Weekly Update #209, ICC-PIDS-WU-209/14_Eng,
International Criminal Court,
The Hague, The
Netherlands, retrieved December 12, 2022. (notes: "On 6 May 2014, the Registrar of the International Criminal Court (ICC)... gave a keynote speech at the launch of a “JusticeInfo.Net”, a new media platform focusing on transitional justice. The event was held by Fondation Hirondelle and the Embassy of Switzerland in The Hague at the ICC’s premises. Speakers... included... Professor Pierre Hazan (Universities of Geneva and Neuchâtel),...")
^
abcdefghi"Pierre Hazan," "Experts," Institute for Integrated Transitions, Barcelona, Spain. Retrieved November 20, 2022.
^
abcdefghEtter, Jean-Marie (CEO Fondation Hirondelle), Pierre Hazan, (Head of Project Justiceinfo.net), and François Sergent, (Editor in Chief Justiceinfo.net): press release:
"Justiceinfo.Net Takes Up The Challenge," July 2nd, 2015, PierreHazan.com Retrieved November 20, 2022.
^
abcBurnand, Frederic:
"The non-miraculous virtues of transitional justice," June 23, 2015, Swissinfo on tvsvissera.it, 2015 (English, translated from
original Italian); retrieved December 15, 2022; (notes; "Since [establishment] of the
International Criminal Court... international justice has developed to [assist] war-affected societies [to] rebuild. [Concurrently, methods like] truth and reconciliation commissions [support or supplant] judicial [action] to heal... wounds... still open. To [make] this [clearer], Pierre Hazan, [a] specialist [at] responses to mass crimes,... launched a bilingual site (French/English) [in conjunction] with François Sergent, [a] former journalist [for] Libération, [plus] Jean-Marie Etter, director general... Hirondelle Foundation. [The site focuses] on legal, political, [and especially] human issues... to help assailants and victims... coexist as peacefully as possible, [after conflict]...")
^"JusticeInfo.net," "Universal Periodic Review: 7–18 November 2022," Conference primer: Human Rights Council, "Commons," United Nations (
Chile) — citing multiple JusticeInfo, articles on
Ukraine, Retrieved November 20, 2022.
^Guide de l’étudiant 2018 - 2019 (Guide to the Student, 2018-2016,"), Master Arts visuels , HEAD – Genève (Haute école d'art et de design / University of Art and Design); (notes, in the section, "Cycle Master: Département Arts visuels: CCC Research Master and PhD-Forum – Critical Curatorial Cybernetic Contemporary Research Studies", the subsection "Faculty," sub-subsection "Professors," lists "Pierre Hazan."); retrieved December 11, 2022
^A/HRC/25/49: "Report on memorization processes in post-conflict and divided societies," January 23, 2014,
United Nations Special Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights; delivered March 2014, to the
U.N. Human Rights Council, 25th session, (notes: "...the Special Rapporteur held an expert meeting... see... statements from the experts invited: ...Mr. Pierre Hazan, Co-Director of the PIMPA research project ('Politics of Memory and Art Practices: The Role of Art in Peace and Reconstruction Processes'), Geneva University of Art and Design.") Retrieved December 12, 2022
^
abannouncement: "Online Workshop: Peace Talks: Reconciliation After Conflict," May 14, 2021,
Bocconi University, retrieved December 12, 2022. (notes: "How to reconcile a country [following] civil conflict?...In this “Peace-Talk”... two great experts..., Prof. Oeindrila Dube... and Mr. Pierre Hazan... discuss this issue... He... advised international organizations, governments... armed groups on... justice, amnesty, reparation, truth commission, [as well as] forced disappearances, international humanitarian law... human rights. He... worked with... Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights... collaborated with.. United Nations in the Balkans. ...member of... International Contact Group on... Basque Conflict, which co-organized... Peace Conference leading to... end of political violence in... Basque country. ...worked in many conflict zones... Africa... Balkans... Middle East... Europe.")
^
ab"François Sergent, journalist: Biography,"Akadem, retrieved December 13, 2022; (translated from
original French); (notes: "François Sergent is a journalist. ...at Liberation from 1981 to 2015 [as] a reporter, [foreign] correspondent... and deputy editor... [He later became] editor-in-chief of justiceinfo.net... (2015-2018).")
^
abcd"Thierry Cruvellier,"NiemanReports,Nieman Foundation,
Harvard University, retrieved December 13, 2022; (notes: "Thierry Cruvellier... 2004 Nieman Fellow... former editor... International Justice Tribune. ...covered... International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda... 1997 [through] 2002, and... Special Court and... Truth and Reconciliation Commission [for] Sierra Leone in 2003.")