Webinar
Thursday, July 2, 2026, 2:30–4:00 PM EDT / 11:30 AM–1:00 PM PDT / 12:30–2:00 PM MDT / 1:30–3:00 PM CDT / 3:30–5:00 PM ADT / 7:30–9:00 PM BST / 8:30–10:00 PM CAT, CEST / 9:30–11:00 PM EEST / 10:30 PM–12:00 AM GST
This International Center for MultiGenerational Legacies of Trauma webinar is ninth in ICMGLT’s Reparative Justice series, this time focusing on South Sudan and related regional experiences. Survivors, justice practitioners, peacebuilders, academics, community leaders, and civil society representatives from South Sudan and across the region will explore reparative justice as a pathway to healing, reconciliation, and sustainable peace. Panelists will explore what reparative justice means in practice for South Sudanese survivors and communities and how it can address the long-term impacts of conflict-related sexual violence, displacement, and intercommunal violence. They shall examine what forms of reparations and support survivors need for healing and recovery, the role of traditional and community-based mechanisms in complementing formal justice processes and reconciliation efforts, the importance of survivor participation and leadership in designing reparative measures, identify practical recommendations and experiences from within the region and South Sudan.
Speakers:

Jackline Nasiwa
Jackline Nasiwa is the Founder and Executive Director of the Centre for Governance, Peace and Justice (CIGPJ), a non-profit advancing human rights, civic engagement, and inclusive governance in South Sudan. She holds a Bachelor of Laws, a master’s in international law, and trained in peace negotiations. A committed civil rights activist and PILPG Senior Peace Fellow, she promotes women’s leadership, transitional justice, and legal empowerment. She has briefed the UN Security Council, supported national reform processes, and is a recipient of major human rights and women’s rights defender awards.

Counsel Amanya Joseph Peter
Counsel Amanya Joseph Peter is a South Sudanese human rights lawyer and governance practitioner specializing in transitional justice, legal advocacy, gender justice, and justice sector reform. He serves as Project Coordinator at Legal Action Worldwide (LAW), Managing Director of Pinnacle Attorneys, and Director of Academics and Training at Remijious College of Professional Legal English Training. His work focuses on advancing the rule of law, accountability, and access to justice in South Sudan.

Malala John Mojwok
Malala John Mojwokis a South Sudanese protection practitioner with over seven years of experience working with survivors of conflict-related sexual violence (CRSV), women, and conflict-affected communities. She is the Coordinator of the South Sudanese Survivors Network and serves as an Assistant GBV/Protection Counsellor with the Young Women’s Christian Association (YWCA) in South Sudan. Mary is strong advocate for survivor-centered approaches to transitional justice and peacebuilding, with extensive experience in survivor advocacy, protection programming, community engagement, and advancing the rights, dignity, and recovery of conflict-affected communities in South Sudan.

Francis Nono
Francis Nono is a transitional justice and peacebuilding practitioner with over eighteen years of experience in post-conflict settings in Uganda and internationally. He is the Founder and Director of the African Center for Peace and Conflict Memory and serves on the African Union Commission’s roster of Transitional Justice Experts. His work focuses on reparations, survivor-centred justice, and community-led peacebuilding, including support to the Juba Peace Process between the Government of Uganda and the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA).
Moderator:

Dr. Yael Danieli
A clinical psychologist, traumatologist, victimologist and psychohistorian, Dr. Danieli is Founder, Executive Director and Senior Representative to the United Nations of the International Center for MultiGenerational Legacies of Trauma (ICMGLT); Director, Group Project for Holocaust Survivors and their Children and Past-President, International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.
