The paper discusses how current methodological debates on the potential of comparative
area studies intersect with current trends in transitional justice research. As the field of
transitional justice studies is approaching saturation, academic efforts in this field are increasingly
focused on empirical as well as theoretical generalization. The challenge of
comparative transitional justice research is less to weigh the national impacts of policies
than to incorporate a more historicized conception of causality that includes complex longterm
processes and global interdependencies. From the perspective of comparative area
studies, the case of transitional justice studies testifies to the need to combine the local, national,
transnational, translocal, and global levels of analysis
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