Conclusion
摘要
This book examines what transitional justice looks like when there is no transition. It has been shown that even in contexts where the armed conflict does not end, and authoritarianism endures, justice work does not disappear; it relocates, transforms, and multiplies through the practices of victims and civil society actors. The Kurdish conflict in Turkey provided the ground on which to explore this paradox: a setting of protracted conflict, peace attempts, and recurring denial, yet also one of relentless bottom-up mobilization for truth, accountability, and memory.