Draft talk:JusticeInfo

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JusticeInfo -- Notability[edit]

JusticeInfo meets the standards of WP:NOTABILITY. In one of the world's most significant, newsworthy, contentious. transformative, and pivotal functions of government -- Transitional justice, the legal and moral evolution of a nation from the suffering of war crimes, genocide, and crimes against humanity to the deterrent and restorative roles of war crimes trials, truth and justice commissions, remembrance and memorialization, reconciliation and reparations -- JusticeInfo, despite its amateurish layout, apparently stands largely alone as the primary online global medium specifically focused on reporting and analyzing the full scope of developments and issues in this major field of international affairs.

As the organization is only 7 years old, there's not much online chatter about the entity, itself, except from the founders and affiliate institutions.

However, in transitional justice subjects, JusticeInfo is already one of the sources most widely and commonly quoted and cited by major media, academia, think tanks, and intergovernmental organizations (various examples cited in the section "Distribution and use") -- which is how I came across it (repeatedly), and why I'm producing an article about it.

Clearly, with its apparent deep reach and broad acceptance within the community of entities investigating, practicing and enforcing transitional justice, globally, JusticeInfo is almost inevitably influential in the field -- for better or worse.

As a product of multiple noted institutions (Hirondelle Foundation -- which needs its own article), Oxford University, and the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative, with wide global support, and with a global cast of key journalists with exceptional credentials (as noted and documented in the "Management and staff" section), it is clearly a "high-powered" development in global journalism -- further enhanced by its apparent policy of making all its content available freely, and for free re-publishing by other media, under the same Creative Commons License concept that Wikipedia uses.

~ Penlite (talk) 11:21, 23 November 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Draft Mode edits - pending changes[edit]

Since this article has been moved to Draft mode, and is thus not visible, pending rework by me, and review and approval by other editors, I'm taking care to OVER-document every claim -- to dispell any and all doubts expressed by the editors who decided it was inadequately documented, and thus not ready for publication.

I have used many repeat wikilinks, and have added extensive quotes from sources in the reference citations. Those are NOT intended for publication -- but only to simplify and expedite review by the editors who are demanding changes to the article (with the realization that they will surely at least spot-check some of the quotes to be sure they're accurate).

When they have reviewed and advised me that they are satisfied with the extensively overhauled article, I will remove the italicized text, and redundant wikilinks, and advise them it's ready for publication.

(If they like, I can also bundle ref cites at the ends of paragraphs, to improve readability of text.)

Please, do NOT remove the italicized text or redundant wikilinks on your own. Please leave that for me to do, when approval of the article is given.

~ Penlite (talk) 16:18, 13 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]

A bit more time, please[edit]

Please extend the presence of this Draft article for another month. I am making progress on it, but the need to dig for sources in foreign languages (and getting them translated to English) is a huge pain, and very time-consuming -- something I cannot afford right now.

As you can see from the additions to the references, I am making progress on citing independent sources (with quotes, as explained in my previous Talk post), but this requires much more time to complete. ~ Penlite (talk) 09:28, 27 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]