@article{THESIS,
      recid = {2850},
      author = {Krmoyan, Karen},
      title = {Americanizing Accountability: The Effects of US  Interventions on Domestic Transitional Justice},
      publisher = {University of Chicago},
      school = {M.A.},
      address = {2021-06},
      number = {THESIS},
      abstract = {How does the TJ agenda of post-transition societies change  when foreign actors are involved? Focusing on the US as a  foreign actor, I argue that US involvement in foreign TJ  resulted in a more retributive TJ agenda, which emphasized  criminal prosecutions of former perpetrators, rather than a  reconciliatory framework, i.e. truth-revealing and  reconciliatory mechanisms. The US did so by applying (1)  economic coercion in the form of threats and/or actual  sanctions and (2) creating increased financial and  technical opportunities for the creation and implementation  of TJ mechanisms. I use the Global Transitional Justice  Dataset (GTJD) to test my hypotheses and conduct a case  study in Liberia to analyze the underlying mechanism behind  the observed relationships.},
      url = {http://knowledge.uchicago.edu/record/2850},
      doi = {https://doi.org/10.6082/uchicago.2850},
}