ICTJ was founded in 2001 to help societies deal with legacies of massive human rights abuses and achieve sustainable peace. Twenty years later, ICTJ continues to provide advice, support, and technical assistance to victims, members of civil society, and state actors committed to justice in countries around the world from Afghanistan to Colombia, Lebanon, Nepal, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, and Uganda, to name a few. In a fast-changing world, ICTJ regularly reexamines and adapts its methodology to develop innovative solutions to emerging problems, advance its mission, and achieve justice for victims of human rights violations. In that spirit, ICTJ recently launched an exciting new website and newsletter design. After over a year of research, planning, surveying stakeholders, designing, and testing, we unveiled a site that better aligns with what ICTJ and transitional justice are today.
The Resource Library brings together all of ICTJ’s content from the last 20 years and allows users to easily search the collection by type, country, topic, and keyword. In addition to reports and other publications, you can find feature articles, opinion pieces, multimedia projects, photo galleries, and videos. These news and multimedia materials represent high-quality reporting and rigorous research, and often highlight the importance of art and culture to the transitional justice process.