Lustration and Transitional Justice
Lustration and Transitional Justice: Personnel Systems in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland
by Roman David
Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press
A volume in the Pennsylvania Studies in Human Rights series
328 pages | 6 x 9 | 11 illus. Cloth Sep 2011 | ISBN 978-0-8122-4331-4 |
How do transitional democracies deal with officials who have been tainted by complicity with prior governments? Should they be excluded or should they be incorporated into the new system? In Lustration and Transitional Justice, Roman David examines major institutional innovations that developed in Central Europe following the collapse of communist regimes. While the Czech Republic approved a lustration (vetting) law based on the traditional method of dismissals, Hungary and Poland devised alternative models that granted their tainted officials a second chance in exchange for truth. David classifies personnel systems as exclusive, inclusive, and reconciliatory; they are based on dismissal, exposure, and confession, respectively, and they represent three major classes of transitional justice.
Lustration is not analyzed here only as a regional instance of transitional justice but as a mirror of major (perpetrator-centered) transitional justice strategies. The book proposes a transformative theory of transitional justice that helps to explain the origin and the effects of transitional justice. It then empirically examines the effects of dismissal, exposure, and confession on trust in government, social reconciliation, and collective memory.
The use of survey experiments provides an opportunity to test the effects of transitional justice at the microlevel within three different macropolitical contexts. For instance, can confession contribute to reconciliation in a retributive society?
Winner of the Concept Analysis in Political Science Award (2012) by the Research Committee on Concepts and Methods of the International Political Science Association (IPSA).
REVIEWS OF THE BOOK:
Christopher K. Lamont, "Transitional Justice: Power, Symbols, and Political Science," International Journal of Transitional Justice, Vol. 7, 186-93 (2013).
Kieran Williams, "Lustration and Transitional Justice", Slavic Review, 689-90 (2012).
Helga Welsh, "Lustration and Transitional Justice," Choice, Vol. 49, No. 08 (April 2012).
Tim Haughton, "Battlefields, Ammunition, and Uniforms: The Past and Politics in Post-Communist Central and Eastern Europe", Comparative European Politics, Vol. 11, 249-40 (2013).
Andy Aitchison, "Book Review: Lustration and Transitional Justice," Social & Legal Studies 22:277-80 (2013).
Steven D. Roper, "Post-Transitional Justice by Collins" and "Lustration and Transitional Justice by David," Perspectives on Politics 11(2): 667-69 (2013).
TABLE OF CONTENT
Preface ix
List of Abbreviations xiii
Introduction 1 (AVAILABLE TO DOWNLOAD!)
Part I. Personnel Systems and Transitional Justice
Chapter 1. Personnel Systems and Their Classification 17
Chapter 2. The Symbolic Meaning of Personnel Systems 43
Part II. Lustration Systems in Central Europe
Chapter 3. Lustration Systems and Their Operation 65
Chapter 4. The Origin of Lustration Systems 93
Chapter 5. The Politics of Lustration Systems 131
Part III. Experimental Evidence
Chapter 6. Political Effects: Trust in Government 165
Chapter 7. Social Effects: Reconciliation and Collective Memory 194
Conclusion 225
Appendix A. The Dilemmas of Personnel Systems (AVAILABLE TO DOWNLOAD!)
Appendix B. The Experimental Vignette
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments