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Genocide Studies, Prevention Special Issue on Aftermath of Genocide

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  • Genocide Studies, Prevention Special Issue on Aftermath of Genocide

    PRESS RELEASE
    International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies (IIGHRS)
    CONTACT: Megan Swan
    Tel: 416-250-9807
    Email: [email protected]

    October 28, 2008


    Genocide Studies and Prevention Special Issue on the Aftermath of Genocide


    This special issue of Genocide Studies and Prevention focuses on the
    aftermath of genocide, a fascinating area within genocide studies which
    addresses the reality that genocide continues long after the direct
    killing stops. The issue explores the post-genocidal period in terms of
    justice in Rwanda, reconciliation in Bosnia and the former Yugoslavia,
    and the cross-generational impact of denial of the Armenian Genocide.

    "The Injustice of Local Justice: Truth, Reconciliation and Revenge in
    Rwanda" by Jennie E. Burnet, Assistant Professor in the Department of
    Anthropology at the University of Louisville, calls into question the
    issue of justice. Based on extensive fieldwork in Rwanda over the past
    decade, Burnet finds that the successful functioning of the gacaca
    courts varies greatly among communities. The most important variable
    appears to be the character of the "persons of integrity" who serve as
    both judge and jury in this grassroots court system. It is clear in the
    short-term, at least, that this local justice initiative has actually
    increased conflict in local communities and intensified ethnic cleavages
    now fourteen years after the end of the Rwandan Genocide.

    Rupert Brown, Professor of Social Psychology at the University of
    Sussex, England, and Sabina Cehajic, Lecturer in the Political Science
    Department of the Sarajevo School of Science and Technology in Bosnia
    and Herzegovina, authored the second article, "Not in My Name: A Social
    Psychological Study of Antecedents and Consequences of Acknowledgement
    of In-Group Atrocities." The article explores socio-psychological
    factors influencing individuals' readiness and willingness to
    acknowledge Serbian atrocities. Based on in-depth interviews with
    eighteen Serbians between 1992 and 1995, this study provides essential
    insights into some Serbian attitudes that will be invaluable for a
    realistic approach to the rehabilitation of Serbian society and future
    reconciliation with victims in the former Yugoslavia-and potentially
    other cases.

    The article by Maja Catic, a PhD candidate in the Politics Department at
    Brandeis University, and former fieldworker in Yugoslavia, delves into
    the sobering reality that reconciliation between post-genocide parties
    who are attempting to live in the same state and imagine themselves as
    part of the same political community is completely different from
    post-genocide parties who do not have to attempt to live together again.
    "A Tale of Two Reconciliations: Germans and Jews after World War II
    and Bosnia after Dayton" argues that the success of German-Jewish
    reconciliation relies on the fact that the victims and perpetrators did
    not have to live in the same state in the aftermath of genocide. This
    challenges the persistent tendency to invoke German-Jewish
    reconciliation as a viable model for all other post-genocide societies,
    such as Bosnia.

    The groundbreaking article "Cycles of Genocide, Stories of Denial: Atom
    Egoyan's Ararat" by Donna-Lee Frieze, Research Fellow in the School of
    History, Heritage and Society at Deakin University, Australia, offers
    penetrating insights into the denial of genocide and its long-term
    impact on victims, perpetrators, and their relationships. This
    extensive analysis of Atom Egoyan's landmark feature film on the
    Armenian Genocide broaches the complex challenges of representing
    genocide artistically, hinging on whether the artist conceives genocide
    to be an isolated historical event or an ongoing reality. Frieze finds
    Egoyan revealing that the truth of genocide is much more complex,
    fragmented, and unsettled than is typically understood when genocide is
    viewed solely in terms of the mass killing. This article is an
    essential read and invites a revisit to Egoyan's Ararat.

    Editor Henry Theriault has done a great service by providing a wide
    variety of articles illustrating that "the post-genocide period poses a
    range of great challenges, and genocide casts its shadow across
    generations."

    Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal was co-founded
    by the International Association of Genocide Scholars and the
    International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies (A
    Division of the Zoryan Institute). The journal's mission is to
    understand the phenomenon of genocide, create an awareness of it as an
    ongoing scourge, and promote the necessity of preventing it, for both
    pragmatic and moral reasons. It is the official journal of the
    International Association of Genocide Scholars and is published three
    times a year by the University of Toronto Press. For more information,
    contact the IIGHRS at [email protected] or Tel: 416-250-9807.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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