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Harvard Portrait: Jens Meierhenrich

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  • Harvard Portrait: Jens Meierhenrich

    Harvard Portrait: Jens Meierhenrich

    Harvard Magazine
    July/August 2006

    A very long bookshelf in Jens Meierhenrich's Harvard office holds a
    complete transcript of the Nuremberg trial of major war criminals, in
    42 volumes. "I had to break the bank to buy them," he says. But these
    are essential references for the German-born, 33-year-old scholar,
    who tells students that his "interest in genocide is both professional
    and personal"; much of his research on genocide and transitional
    justice is about "finding a lens to revisit my own country's history."

    Meierhenrich, an assistant professor of government and of social
    studies since 2005, has peered through that lens in South Africa
    and Rwanda and at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
    Yugoslavia in The Hague.

    This fall, in Japan, he'll investigate the Tokyo tribunal-General
    MacArthur's response to Japanese atrocities during World War
    II. Beginning in 2008, Princeton will publish Meierhenrich's
    interdisciplinary trilogy on genocide.

    "I'm little concerned about morality tales. We are all outraged by
    genocide," he says. "We need to understand not only why people kill,
    but how they kill. Victims in the Armenian genocide, for example,
    were crucified and had crosses tattooed on their foreheads. In Rwanda,
    certain bodies were dumped in the river, sending them, symbolically,
    'back to Ethiopia.' You can transmit a message in the way you kill."

    Meierhenrich has no bachelor's degree, but after working for nearly
    two years at research centers in South Africa, he won a Rhodes
    Scholarship to Oxford, where he earned a D.Phil. in politics and
    international relations.

    Next came Columbia, and then the Kennedy School of Government. In
    2002, he took a group of undergraduates to Rwanda for two months. This
    summer, he's doing it again.

    http://www.harvardmagazine.com/on-line/070 654.html
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