01573 2200241 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001800097041000800115082001100123084001700134100001800151245006200169250001300231260003400244300003500278500003200313520091000345650002401255990002601279990002601305INLIS00000000000438020221024113046 a0010-0520004380221024 | | eng  a0-521-61564-x aeng a323.49 a323.49 FRE t0 aFreeman, Mark1 aTruth commissions and procedural fairness /cMark Freeman a1 st Ed. aNew York :bNusa Media,c2006 axxii, 400 p.; 23 cm. ;c23 cm. aIndeks : Index (p. 393-400) aThis is the first law book devoted entirely to the subject of truth commissions. The book sets forth standards of procedural fairness aimed at protecting the rights and interests of those who come into contact with truth commissions-primarily victims and their families, witnesses, and perpetrators. The aim of the book is to provide recommended criteria of procedural fairness for five possible components of a truth commission?s mandate: the taking of statements, the use of subpoenas, the exercise of powers of search and seizure, the holding of victim-centered public hearings and the publication of findings of individual responsibility in a final report (sometimes called the issue of ?naming names?). The book draws on the experience of past and present truth commissions, analogous national and multilateral investigative bodies, and international and comparative standards of procedural fairness. 4a1. Truth comissions a06747/mKRI-P/XII-2007 a06747/mKRI-P/XII-2007