Volume 3 of the International Human Rights Scholarship Review presents two compelling articles examining justice and reform in East Africa. Serge Gasore reflects on Rwanda’s post-genocide recovery through the work of Rwanda Children’s Organization, a child-centered initiative he founded to foster healing through education, healthcare, and economic empowerment. Anna Wakeling offers a narrative exploration of Uganda’s life imprisonment jurisprudence, highlighting how conflicting legal interpretations—whether a “life sentence” means 20 years, 50 years, or something else entirely—have produced a fragmented and often uncertain penal framework. Together, these contributions provide insight into the legal and social dimensions of rebuilding in the aftermath of conflict.