Planned intervention: On Thursday 19/09 between 05:30-06:30 (UTC), Zenodo will be unavailable because of a scheduled upgrade in our storage cluster.
Published July 1, 2020 | Version Accepted Version
Journal article Open

Traumatized War Criminal? Documenting the Case of Esad Landžo

  • 1. Griffith Law School, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia

Description

Perpetrators' voices have been traditionally ignored in the transitional justice field and beyond. Esad Landžo was only 19 when he committed the crimes of willful killing, torturing, and causing serious injury to the detainees of notorious Čelebići camp in Bosnia and Herzegovina. In 2001, Landžo was sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia for the crimes he committed in 1992. After serving two thirds of his sentence in 2006 and settling in Finland, Landžo and the Danish filmmaker, Lars Feldballe Petersen, embarked on the project of making a documentary movie about Landžo's traumatic memories, remorse, and regret. Landžo had a strong urge to extend his apology to each victim individually and in 2015 went to Čelebići to meet his former detainees. This article will build on a scarce conversation in scholarly, and legal discourse, as to why psychological trauma is considered to be an experience that belongs to victims. It will analyze difficult and untold perpetrators' experiences of criminal acts and explore whether in these experiences there is potential for inner and group understanding. This article draws on the author's interviews with Landžo, the main protagonist in the movie The Unforgiven: A War's Criminal Remorse, a film that documents the extraordinary story of Landžo: from his denial to redemption.

Simic, Traumatized War Criminal? Documenting the Case of Esad Landžo, 'International Criminal Justice Review' (, ) pp. 105756772094078. Copyright © 2020. DOI: 10.1177/1057567720940786. Users who receive access to an article through a repository are reminded that the article is protected by copyright and reuse is restricted to non-commercial and no derivative uses. Users may also download and save a local copy of an article accessed in an institutional repository for the user's personal reference. For permission to reuse an article, please follow our Process for Requesting Permission.

Deposited by shareyourpaper.org and openaccessbutton.org. We've taken reasonable steps to ensure this content doesn't violate copyright. However, if you think it does you can request a takedown by emailing help@openaccessbutton.org.

Files

Files (80.2 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:3f2495f0ed3f0bb998f083d4414780a1
80.2 kB Download