In this special issue selected presentations from the symposium celebrating the twentieth anniversary of the Feminism and Legal Theory Project. The project was founded in 1984 by professor Martha A. Fineman. Fineman's vision created and sustains the rich tradition of focusing a feminist, legal and theoretical lens on issues ranging from the socio-economic and geopolitical to the institutional and metaphysical.
Author presents the development of transitional justice in Hungary in which she analyses the tribunals treatment of female perpetrators. The developing scholarly research on female perpetrators who are members of the Arrow Cross movement gives insight on gender dimension of not only the retro-active justice but also of violence against Jews.