The Justice Facade
Trials of Transition in Cambodia
Alexander Hinton
Reviews and Awards
"[Hinton's] method and argument contributes to transitional justice - and particularly international criminal justice - scholarship and has implications for human rights, peacebuilding, and development studies in Cambodia. The Justice Facade is also compelling reading, with Hinton's attention toward lived experience offering a richly emotive and personalised account of the dynamic impact of the Democratic Kampuchea period." -- Dr Emma Palmer, New Mandala
"The concept of 'the justice facade', among others offered in the book, is very useful in describing the idealised imaginaries which alienate lived experiences on the ground ... Hinton asks readers to unpack their own transitional justice imaginaries and their facade-like renderings to consider more deeply the meanings and purposes of 'justice', 'peacebuilding' and transitional justice measures. This book is therefore a very welcome contribution to critical transitional justice studies." -- Ebru Demir, LSE Review of Books blog
"The Justice Façade is a ground-breaking book. Hinton provides a remarkable, closely observed study of transitional justice. Bringing his longstanding experience in post-genocide Cambodia to bear, he skilfully overturns much conventional wisdom about what it takes to come to terms with historic injustice. With this highly imaginative book, Hinton advances the study and practice of transitional justice in innumerable ways. The Justice Façade is essential reading for anyone intent on exporting the rule of law." - Jens Meierhenrich, author of The Remnants of the Rechtsstaat: A Ethnography of Nazi Law
"Behind the façade of the utopia of contemporary transitional justice, Alexander Laban Hinton finds a different set of personal realities. His extraordinary ethnography and phenomenology of the processes unleashed by Cambodia>'s attempt to reckon with the genocidal past is the richest treatment of what transitional justice means as lived experience, beyond the familiar distractions of the promotional advertising and the liberal democratic teleology of the field." - Samuel Moyn, author of Not Enough: Human Rights in an Unequal World
"there is much to ponder in this book ... Any students of transitional justice who see the Cambodian experience as a chapter in a larger, evolving volume will find much to advance their thinking." -- James Jennings, The Mekong Review