From Amnesty to Accountability: The Ebbs and Flows in the Search for Justice in Argentina

AMNESTY IN THE AGE OF HUMAN RIGHTS ACCOUNTABILITY: COMPARATIVE AND INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES, Leigh A. Payne and Francesca Lessa, eds., Cambridge University Press, 2012

41 Pages Posted: 29 Feb 2012

See all articles by Par Engstrom

Par Engstrom

Institute of the Americas, University College London; Paris School of International Affairs, Sciences Po

Gabriel Pereira

University of Oxford

Date Written: January 1, 2012

Abstract

This chapter accounts for the political and judicial processes of accountability that led to the overturning of Argentina’s amnesties and the reopening of trials for human rights violations committed by the military regime that ruled the country from 1976 to 1983.2 It locates these processes in the broader context of transitional justice in Argentina and examines the role of the main actors involved. The chapter also identifies the key factors that explain the Argentine pathway to accountability and evaluates the extent of Argentina’s uniqueness as the first country in Latin America to overturn domestic legislation shielding perpetrators of grave human rights crimes from prosecution. Looking beyond the region of Latin America, the Argentine transitional justice experience is important since the country has had to struggle with the moral and political dilemmas of justice and order in the context of rapid and uncertain political change, well before the establishment of transitional justice as a distinct academic discipline and field of policy expertise. Moreover, Argentina’s processes have been viewed in the transitional justice literature as an example to be either emulated or avoided. As such, it is important to draw the appropriate conclusions on the basis of a sound understanding of the Argentine experience before evaluating the likelihood and appropriateness of other societies following a similar pathway to accountability.

The Argentine case shows that transitional justice is not a linear process. Political circumstances change as power balances shift and, consequently, the incentives facing relevant political actors change as well. Particularly, in relation to the search for justice, Argentina has gone through an “ebb and flow” process in which the initial opening to judicial accountability of human rights violations was gradually restricted and eventually foreclosed. However, unrestricted prosecution has been reopened almost twenty years after the beginning of the transition to democracy. These developments have occurred due to shifts in the balance of power and motivations of ruling governments, the military, and human rights organizations (HROs), together with broader shifts in the normative environment in which these actors operate, as Kathryn Sikkink points out in her chapter in this volume.

The chapter is divided into three parts. The first part recounts the initial efforts at and restrictions on prosecution under the Alfonsín administration. The second part examines the ways in which the subsequent Menem governments attempted to shift transitional justice politics away from prosecutions toward reconciliation and reparations and the response to that shift from HROs, primarily through increased judicial actions at home and abroad. The final part examines the process of overturning Argentina’s amnesty laws by explaining the political context in which this process occurred and by accounting for the judicial process that led up to these historic events.

Keywords: Argentina, accountability, amnesty, human rights, transitional justice, human rights trials, mobilization

Suggested Citation

Engstrom, Par and Pereira, Gabriel, From Amnesty to Accountability: The Ebbs and Flows in the Search for Justice in Argentina (January 1, 2012). AMNESTY IN THE AGE OF HUMAN RIGHTS ACCOUNTABILITY: COMPARATIVE AND INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES, Leigh A. Payne and Francesca Lessa, eds., Cambridge University Press, 2012, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2013349

Par Engstrom (Contact Author)

Institute of the Americas, University College London ( email )

Gower Street
London, WC1E 6BT
United Kingdom

Paris School of International Affairs, Sciences Po

27 rue Saint-Guillaume
Paris Cedex 07, 75337
France

Gabriel Pereira

University of Oxford ( email )

Mansfield Road
Oxford, Oxfordshire OX1 4AU
United Kingdom

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