This paper explores the convergences and divergence between transitional justice and peacebuilding, by considering some of the recent developments in scholarship and practice. We examine the notion of 'peace' in transitional justice and the idea of 'justice' in peacebuilding. We highlight that transitional justice and peacebuilding often engage with similar or related ideas, though the scholarship on in each field has developed, largely, in parallel to each other, and often without any significant engagement between the fields of inquiry. We also note that both fields share other commonalities, insofar as they often neglect questions of capital (political, social, economic) and at times, gender. We suggest that trying to locate the nexus in the first place draws attention to where peace and justice have actually got to be produced in order for there not to be conflict and violence. This in turn demonstrates that locally, 'peace' and 'justice' do not always look like the 'peace' and 'justice' drawn up by international donors and peacebuilders; and, despite the 'turn to the local' in international relations, it is surprising just how many local and everyday dynamics are (dis)missed as sources of peace and justice, or potential avenues of addressing the past. Sharp (2013b) notes, around this time, transitional justice emerged out of the peripheries of international politics and became mainstream. The hope amongst international actors intervening in post-conflict spaces, was that transitional justice would help remove perpetrators from the political life, and that the recognition of victims would lead to less grievance in the future, thus preventing another cycle of conflict. However, as this special issue discusses, the relationship between transitional justice and peacebuilding is not only contentious and non-linear, but often, also neglected by scholars of both fields. Transitional justice and peacebuilding are deeply intertwined, both practically and discursively, but the amount of literature connecting these two scholarships and practices is relatively low. Even though Rama Mani called attention to 'the nexus between rebuilding peace and restoring justice' as early as 2002 (Mani 2002: 4), the overlaps between the two fields have been neglected. Furthermore, as Sharp (2013a:195 notes, 'remarkably' similar critiques have been raised against both transitional justice and peacebuilding, even though these fields have 'historically proceeded on separate tracks'. These observations are some of the starting points of discussions raised by this special issue. This introduction first outlines the key literature in both fields, locating 'peace' in transitional justice and 'transitional justice' in peacebuilding, before discussing the implications and outlining the contributions of the papers in this volume. Where is peace in transitional justice? 'Peacebuilding' and 'transitional justice', like any other analytical concepts, exist because institutions and scholars have constructed them as objects that can be known about. T...