'Shifting Legal Visions is a fascinating analysis of how Latin American judges came to hold dictatorial torturers and murderers accountable after years of shielding them from justice. The driving force behind this profound conversion, Ezequiel A. Gonzalez-Ocantos demonstrates in this carefully designed and richly researched account, was the persistent, strategic effort of human-rights NGO's to teach judges new ways of thinking and ruling. This transformative, path-breaking book will be a must-read for scholars and human-rights organizers alike.' Charles Epp, University of Kansas
'Many transitions to democracy rest on a Faustian bargain with the outgoing repressive regime, formalized in a legal impunity regime. This book explores the work of the human rights activists and organizations that dismantled those impunity regimes in Latin America. They did so in large part, Gonzalez-Ocantos argues, by changing the way law was understood, educating supportive judges, and removing the intransigent ones. The argument contributes importantly to the literature on comparative judicial politics by paying attention to what is unique about law and courts, without losing sight of their political nature. Gonzalez-Ocantos brings theories of judicial behavior into conversation with broader institutionalist theories in comparative politics, to produce a deeper, richer theory of institutional change and judicial behavior. The book's focus on ideational as well as strategic motivations brings new understanding to an issue that has become central to the construction of democracy, and pushes forward our thinking about why judges do what they do, especially in the area of transitional justice.' Daniel Brinks, University of Texas, Austin
' a fascinating comparative study of how Latin American judicial systems have reacted to the efforts of activists to pursue 'strategic litigation' to bring to account those guilty of human-rights abuses. The author focuses on the role of 'legal preferences'. With a sophisticated comparative research design and impressive documentary and interview-based evidence, the study accounts for variation across and within the cases ofArgentina, Mexico, andPeru.The author emphasizes the diffusion of technical know-how and socialization to change norms and identifies in support of rights-based jurisprudence. At the same time, he recognizes the process as a fundamentally political one. Technical expertise about legal remedies from international law can prove inadequate in the face of intransigent judges supporting the old order, and politicians must be pressured to replace them. Identifying the conditions under which 'replacement' supplements 'persuasion' is one of many contributions of this fine book.' Matthew Evangelista, Cornell University, New York