Scenarios about 'gacaca courts'
Gacaca courts were community-based judicial systems established in Rwanda to address crimes committed during the 1994 genocide. These traditional dispute resolution mechanisms were adapted to process hundreds of thousands of genocide cases that the conventional court system could not handle efficiently. The gacaca process aimed to promote truth-telling, reconciliation, and community healing while delivering justice in a country devastated by ethnic violence.
What If Kigali Developed Different Post-Genocide Reconciliation Approaches?
Exploring the alternate timeline where Rwanda pursued alternative justice and reconciliation mechanisms after the 1994 genocide, potentially reshaping the nation's recovery, regional stability, and international peacebuilding models.