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Atenea
Acevedo was born and lives in the world that
is Mexico City. She holds a bachelor’s degree in
International Relations with a specialization in Central
European studies, a diploma in English-Spanish interpretation
and translation, and a diploma in gender and equity relations
between women and men. In translation and interpretation,
she has found the ideal tools to structure her activism
for human rights, gender equality and social change.
Email: atenea.acevedo@gmail.com
|
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Diane F. Afoumado
is Lead Researcher at the Survivors Registry of the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC. Her publications
include L’affiche antisémite en France sous
l’Occupation (Berg International, 2008), and
Exil
Impossible. L’errance des Juifs du paquebot St.
Louis (L’Harmattan, 2005). She contributed to
Repicturing
the Second World War: Representations in Film and Television
(Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), and was co-author with Serge Klarsfeld of
La Spoliation dans les camps de province.
La documentation française (2000). She has also
published more than twenty articles. Email:
dafoumado@ushmm.org |
| |
Joyce Apsel
teaches in the Liberal Studies Program at New York University
and is the 2008–2009 recipient of the NYU Distinguished
Teaching Award. She is editor of Darfur: Genocide Before
our Eyes (Institute for the Study of Genocide, 3rd edn.,
2007) and Teaching about Human Rights (American Sociological
Association, 2005). She is president of the Institute
for the Study of Genocide and director of the education
project, RightsWorks International. Email:
jaa5@nyu.edu |
| |
Paul R. Bartrop
is an Honorary Fellow in the Faculty of
Arts and Education at Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia,
and Head of History at Bialik College, Melbourne, teaching
subjects in history, international studies, and comparative
genocide studies. He has previously been a Scholar-in-Residence
at the Martin-Springer Institute for Teaching the Holocaust,
Tolerance and Humanitarian Values at Northern Arizona
University, and a Visiting Professor at Virginia Commonwealth
University. A past president of the Australian Association
of Jewish Studies, Dr. Bartrop has published nine books
and numerous scholarly articles, mostly in the areas of
Holocaust and genocide studies, and has served on the
editorial committees of a number of Australian and international
periodicals. Email: pbartrop@hotmail.com |
| |
Helen Bond
is Assistant Professor in the Department of Curriculum
and Instruction at Howard University in Washington DC.
She is author of “Teaching the Holocaust in the
urban classroom,” in T. Duboys, ed., Pathways to
the Holocaust (Sense Publishers, 2008). She also serves
as a Human Rights Commissioner appointed by the governor
of West Virginia. With a Ph.D in Human Development, her
research interests are human rights, teacher education,
and development and genocide. Email:
helenbond@verizon.net
|
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R. Charli Carpenter
is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University
of Massachusetts-Amherst. Her teaching and research interests
include national security ethics, transnational advocacy
networks, gender and political violence, and comparative
genocide studies. She is the author of “Innocent
Women and Children”: Gender, Norms and the Protection
of Civilians (Ashgate, 2006), and the editor of Born of
War: Protecting Children of Sexual Violence Survivors
in Conflict Zones (Kumarian Press, 2007). She has also
published numerous articles in journals such as International
Organization, International Studies Quarterly, International
Feminist Journal of Politics, Security Dialogue and Human
Rights Quarterly, and has served as a consultant for the
United Nations. Email: charli.carpenter@gmail.com |
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Ward Churchill
is the author of more than 20 books, including A Little
Matter of Genocide: Holocaust and Denial in the Americas,
1492 to the Present (City Lights, 1997), On the Justice
of Roosting Chickens: Reflections on the Consequences
of U.S. Imperial Arrogance and Criminality (AK Press,
2003), and Kill the Indian, Save the Man: The Genocidal
Impact of American Indian Residential Schools (City Lights,
2004). Most recently, a jury concluded that he had been
illegally fired from his faculty position at the University
of Colorado for expressing his political views. It is
expected that he will be reinstated as a tenured full
professor of American Indian Studies, effective fall semester
2009. Email: wardchurchill@yahoo.com |
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Sara Cohan
serves as Education Director of the Genocide Education
Project, a non-profit educational organization that assists
educators in teaching about human rights and genocide,
particularly the Armenian Genocide. Cohan’s background
combines research, study, curriculum development and teaching.
She was a high school teacher for five years before serving
as a research fellow for Teaching Tolerance, a project
of the Southern Poverty Law Center. She also studied in
Mexico as a recipient of a Fulbright-Hays scholarship.
She has written articles and designed educational materials
for a variety of organizations. Email:
sarac@genocideeducation.org |
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G. Jan Colijn
is Dean of General Studies and Professor of Political
Science at The Richard Stockton College of New Jersey.
He is co-author, with his late father, of Ruin’s
Wheel: A Father on War, A Son on Genocide (ComteQ, 2006),
and author or editor of several other books. His work
in Holocaust and genocide education has garnered several
awards. Email: Jan.Colijn@stockton.edu |
| |
John M. Cox
is Assistant Professor of History at Florida Gulf Coast
University, where he directs the Center for Judaic, Holocaust,
and Human Rights Studies. He is the author of Circles
of Resistance: Jewish, Leftist, and Youth Dissidence in
Nazi Germany (Peter Lang, 2009), and is preparing a book
on genocide in the twentieth century. Dr. Cox is also
on the editorial board of the Journal of Jewish Studies.
Email: jmcox@fgcu.edu |
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Marcia Esparza
is an Assistant Professor in the Criminal Justice department
at John Jay College of Criminal Justice. Since 1997, she
has undertaken research on state violence and genocide
in Guatemala and Chile. She is the co-editor of State
Violence and Genocide in Latin America: The Cold War Years
(Routledge, 2009). She is also Director of the Historical
Memory Project, a resource center documenting the history
of violence in the western hemisphere. Email:
mesparza@jjay.cuny.edu |
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| Stephen C. Feinstein
(1943–2008) was Adjunct Professor of History at
the University of Minnesota and Director of the Center
for Holocaust and Genocide Studies. Among his published
edited volumes are Confronting the Holocaust (University
Press of America, 1998) and Absence/Presence: Critical
Essays on the Artistic Memory of the Holocaust (Syracuse
University Press, 2005). Please see the Preface for further
information about Dr. Feinstein. |
| |
Jonathan C. Friedman
is the Director of Holocaust and Genocide Studies and
Associate Professor of History at West Chester University.
He is the author of five books, most recently Performing
Difference: Representations of the ‘Other’
in Film and Theatre (Rowman and Littlefield, 2008), and
Rainbow Jews: Gay and Jewish Identity in the Performing
Arts (Rowman and Littlefield, 2007). Email:
JFriedman@wcupa.edu |
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Donna-Lee Frieze
is a Research Fellow at the School of History, Heritage
and Society, Deakin University, Melbourne. She is collaborating
with a team of historians and museologists on a history
of the Melbourne Jewish Holocaust Centre. Her teaching
and research areas include genocide studies, film, and
philosophy. Email: donna-lee.frieze@deakin.edu.au |
| |
Lee Ann Fujii
is Assistant Professor of Political Science
and Program Coordinator of the politics cohort of the
Women’s Leadership Program at the George Washington
University. She is the author of Killing Neighbors: Webs
of Violence in Rwanda (Cornell University Press, 2009).
She has also authored articles on mass killing, ethnicity,
and fieldwork challenges in postwar settings. Email:
lafujii@gwu.edu |
| |
Alexander George
is Professor of Philosophy at Amherst College in Amherst,
Massachusetts. He is the author of Philosophies of Mathematics
(with Daniel J. Velleman) (Wiley-Blackwell, 2001), and
a collection of Humor, Sense and Nonsensibility (Fireside,
2004). He has also edited What Would Socrates Say?
(Random
House, 2007), a collection of questions and answers drawn
from AskPhilosophers.org, a Web site where philosophers
answer questions sub¬mitted by the public. He occasionally
suffers from chess fever, and maintains the Web forum
ChessProblem.net. Email: ageorge@amherst.edu |
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Simone Gigliotti
is a Senior Lecturer in the History Programme at Victoria
University, Wellington, New Zealand. She is the co-editor
of The Holocaust: A Reader (Blackwell Publishing, 2005),
and the author of The Train Journey: Transit, Captivity
and Witnessing in the Holocaust (Berghahn Books, 2009).
Email: Simone.Gigliotti@vuw.ac.nz |
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Eric Gordy
is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Social Sciences
at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies of
University College London, where he is director of the
Centre for Southeast European Studies. His research involves
culture and politics during and in the wake of the wars
of Yugoslav succession; he is the author of The Culture
of Power in Serbia: Nationalism and the Destruction of
Alternatives (Penn State Press, 1999). Email:
e.gordy@ucl.ac.uk
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Fred Grünfeld
is Associate Professor of International Relations and
International Organizations at the Faculty of Law of Maastricht
University, the Netherlands. At Maastricht University
he researches and teaches at the Maastricht Centre for
Human Rights and the University College Maastricht. He
is also Professor in the Causes of Gross Human Rights
Violations at the Centre for Conflict Studies, Faculty
of Humanities at Utrecht University. His research is on
comparative genocide studies (Rwanda, Srebrenica and Darfur),
in particular the failures of third parties to prevent
genocide.
E-mail: f.grunfeld@ir.unimaas.nl
|
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Wendy C. Hamblet
is a Canadian philosopher, and Associate Professor of
Liberal Studies at North Carolina A&T State University.
She has authored three books on radical violence, including
The Sacred Monstrous: A Reflection on Violence in Human
Communities (Rowman and Littlefield, 2004) and Savage
Constructions: The Myth of African Savagery (Rowman and
Littlefield, 2008), several anthologies, and many articles
in peer-refereed international journals. Hamblet is also
a practicing Philosophical Counselor and Mediator in public
and private sectors.
Email: wchamblet@gmail.com |
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Michael Hayse
is Director of the Master of Arts Program in Holocaust
and Genocide Studies and Associate Professor of Historical
Studies at the Richard Stockton College of New Jersey.
He is author of Recasting West German Elites: Higher Civil
Servants, Business Leaders, and Physicians in Hesse between
Nazism and Democracy, 1945–1955 (Berghahn Books,
2003).
Email: Michael.Hayse@stockton.edu |
| |
Viktoria Hertling
founded the Center for Holocaust, Genocide & Peace
Studies at the University of Nevada, Reno, in 1994, and
served as its director until her retirement in 2008. She
currently lives in Berlin, Germany.
Email: hertling@unr.edu |
| |
William L. Hewitt
is Professor of History and co-founder of the West Chester
University of Pennsylvania Holocaust/Genocide Studies
Program. He is the editor of Defining the Horrific:
Readings on Genocide and Holocaust in the Twentieth
Century (Prentice-Hall,
2003).
Email:WHewitt@wcupa.edu |
| |
Winton Higgins
is a Visiting Research Fellow in Cultural
Studies at the University of Technology, Sydney. A graduate
of the universities of Sydney, Stockholm, and London,
he has been a board member of the Australian Institute
for Holocaust and Genocide Studies for the last ten years,
and is the author of the Holocaust-themed travel diary,
Journey into Darkness (Brandl & Schlesinger, 2003).
He has also contributed articles to the research series,
Genocide Perspectives.
Email: winton.higgins@uts.edu.au |
| |
Alex Hinton
is Director of the Center for the Study of Genocide and
Human Rights (CGHR) and Associate Professor of Anthropology
and Global Affairs at Rutgers University, Newark (http://cghr.newark.rutgers.edu/).
He is the author of Why Did They Kill? Cambodia in the
Shadow of Genocide (University of California Press,
2005), which received the 2008 Stirling Prize, and five
edited or co-edited collections, including most recently
Genocide: Truth, Memory, and Representation (Duke University
Press, 2009).
E-mail: ahinton@andromeda.rutgers.edu |
| |
Steven L. Jacobs
holds the Aaron Aronov Endowed Chair of Judaic Studies
at the University of Alabama, where he is an Associate
Professor of Religious Studies. He is the author, editor,
or translator of more than sixteeen books, including his
latest, Confronting Genocide: Judaism, Christianity, Islam
(Lexington Books, 2009). His primary fields of research
are biblical interpretation, both Hebrew Bible and
New Testament, and the Holocaust and historical and contemporary
genocides. He remains active on the executive of the International
Association of Genocide Scholars.
Email: sjacobs@bama.ua.edu |
| |
| Adam Jones
see
The Editor |
| |
Ani Kalayjian
holds an honorary Doctor of Science degree from Long Island
University (2001), recognizing her 20 years as a pioneering
clinical researcher, professor, and administrator at the
United Nations. In 2007, she was awarded Columbia University
Teacher College’s Distinguished Alumni of the Year.
She is the author of Disaster and Mass Trauma (Vista Publishing,
1995), coeditor of the volume Forgiveness and Reconciliation
(Springer, 2009), and author of over 40 articles on clinical
methods, human rights, trauma, and women’s issues.
Email: Kalayjiana@aol.com |
| |
Nina Krieger
is Education Director at the Vancouver Holocaust Education
Centre. She studied History at the University of British
Columbia and Humanities & Cultural Studies at
the London Consortium, a multi-disciplinary graduate program
of the University of London, the Architectural Association,
the Institute of Contemporary Arts, and the Tate Gallery.
She has developed exhibitions, public programs, and education
programs at contemporary art galleries and historical
museums in the United Kingdom and Canada.
Email: ninadkrieger@gmail.com |
| |
Scott Laderman
is an Assistant Professor of History at the University
of Minnesota, Duluth. He is author of Tours of Vietnam:
War, Travel Guides, and Memory (Duke University Press,
2009).
Email: laderman@d.umn.edu |
| |
| Raphael Lemkin
(1900–59) was the pioneer of genocide studies. Born
in Poland, he worked as a lawyer in the 1930s on concepts
of “barbarity” and “vandalism”
to describe, and outlaw, the destruction of ethnic and
religious minorities. Fleeing the Nazi invasion of Poland
in 1939, he took refuge in the United States, where in
1944 he published Axis Rule in Occupied Europe (Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace, republished by Lawbook
Exchange in 2005). In this work, Lemkin coined the term
“genocide,” and explored its strategies and
consequences in the lands under Nazi occupation. Lemkin
spent the immediate postwar years in a relentless campaign
to persuade the United Nations to adopt the Convention
on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide,
which it did in 1948. In 1951, the convention attracted
a sufficient number of ratifications to become international
law. The final years of Lemkin’s life were spent
in penury and obscurity, but the modern field of comparative
genocide studies has built upon his foundational contribution.
His wealth of previously-unpublished writings continue
to appear, influencing new generations of scholars and
students. |
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Benjamin Lieberman
is Professor of History at Fitchburg State College in
Massachusetts. He is the author of Terrible Fate: Ethnic
Cleansing in the Making of Modern Europe (Ivan R. Dee,
2006). His research focuses on ethnic cleansing and the
remaking of border zones.
Email: BLieberman@fsc.edu |
| |
Fiona de Londras
is a member of faculty at the School of Law, University
College Dublin, where she is also a member of the Institute
of Criminology. She publishes widely on international
law and resistance to repressive state action, with a
particular focus on counter-terrorism and the judicial
role. Her research has appeared in, among other journals,
Modern Law Review, American Journal of International
Law and Israel Law Review.
Email: fiona.delondras@ucd.ie |
| |
Pam Maclean
is a Senior Lecturer in History at Deakin University in
Victoria, Australia, where she teaches courses in Holocaust
and genocide. With Michele Langfield and Dvir Abramovich
she has edited and contributed to Testifying to the Holocaust
(AAJS, 2008), the first systematic study of video testimonies
given by survivors to the Jewish Holocaust Centre, Melbourne.
She is currently co-ordinating the writing of a history
of the Jewish Holocaust Centre in Melbourne.
Email: pamela.maclean@deakin.edu.au |
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Daniel H. Magilow
is Assistant Professor of German at the University of
Tennessee in Knoxville, Tennessee. He is the editor and
translator of In Her Father’s Eyes: A Childhood
Extinguished by the Holocaust (Rutgers University Press,
2008) and the author of numerous articles about the Holocaust,
its memorialization, and its representation in visual
culture.
Email: dmagilow@utk.edu |
| |
Henry Maitles
is Reader in Education at the University of Strathclyde
in Glasgow, Scotland. He was a member of the Scottish
Review Group on Education for Citizenship which drew up
the proposals now in place in every Scottish school. He
teaches about and researches the impact of subjects such
as the Holocaust on school students’ values and
attitudes. He has published sole-authored and edited books,
as well as articles in refereed journals and the wider
media.
Email: h.maitles@strath.ac.uk |
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Jens Meierhenrich
is Assistant Professor of Government and of Social Studies
at Harvard University. He is the author of a genocide
trilogy, comprising The Rationality of Genocide, The Structure
of Genocide, and The Culture of Genocide (all forthcoming
from Princeton University Press). He is also preparing,
for Oxford University Press, Genocide: A Reader and Genocide:
A Very Short Introduction. He recently published The Legacies
of Law (Cambridge University Press, 2008).
Email: jmeierhenrich@gov.harvard.edu |
| |
Jina Moore
is an independent reporter and producer who has covered
human rights issues in Sierra Leone, Rwanda, the Democratic
Republic of Congo, and the US. A regular correspondent
for the Christian Science Monitor, her work has also appeared
in The Boston Globe, Glamour Magazine and Best American
Science Writing. Her archive and blog may be found at
www.jinamoore.com.
Email: jinamoore@gmail.com |
| |
Thomas Nagy
was a tenured Associate Professor of Expert Systems in
Washington, DC. He researches the application of Web 2.0
methods and linguistics to aid doubly exceptional students
(both gifted and chal¬lenging), and making progressive
Web applications more persuasive and easier to use. He
is deeply concerned with issues of structural violence,
and invites correspondence from those interested in this
subject.
Email: tom500k@gmail.com |
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Edward Paulino
teaches a wide range of writing-intensive interdisciplinary
courses at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice at
the City University of New York. His research interests
include race, genocide, borders, nation-building, Latin
America and the Caribbean, the African diaspora, and New
York State history. His research has been supported by
the Fulbright Foundation, the National Endowment for the
Humanities, the PSC-CUNY Research Foundation, and the
New York State Archives. He lives in Brooklyn with his
wife and daughter.
Email: edpaulino@jjay.cuny.edu |
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Christopher Powell
is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University
of Manitoba in Winnipeg, Canada. He is the author of “What
Do Genocides Kill? A Relational Conception of Genocide,”
published in the Journal of Genocide Research in 2007.
His current book project, Civilization and Genocide, theorizes
the relationship between the expansion of western civilization,
the conversion of difference into danger, and the practice
of genocide.
Email: chris_powell@umanitoba.ca |
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Jack Nusan Porter
is the author or editor of such works as The Jew as Outsider
(University Press of America, 1981), Genocide and Human
Rights (University Press of America, 1982), Sexual Politics
in Nazi Germany (Spencer Press, 1995), and The Genocidal
Mind (University Press of America, 2006). Born in Ukraine
in 1944, he is a child Shoah survivor of two Soviet partisans,
and was subsequently educated in Jerusalem, at the University
of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and at Northwestern
University. Wikipedia page:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jack_Porter.
E-mail:
jacknusan@earthlink.net |
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Eric Reeves is Professor of
English Language and Literature at Smith College in Northampton,
Massachusetts. He has spent the past ten years working
full-time as a Sudan researcher and analyst, publishing
extensively both in the US and internationally. He has
testified several times before Congress, has lectured
widely in academic settings, and has served as a consultant
to a number of human rights and humanitarian organizations
operating in Sudan. He is author of A Long Day’s
Dying: Critical Moments in the Darfur Genocide (The Key,
2007).
Email: ereeves@smith.edu |
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Stefanie Rixecker
is Dean of the Faculty of Environment, Society & Design
at Lincoln University in New Zealand. She is Leader of
the “Global Justice and Environmental Policy”
theme at the Land, Environment and People (LEaP) Research
Centre. She is also a member of the advisory board for
Local Environment: The International Journal of Justice
and Sustainability and is Chair of the Governance Board
of Amnesty International, Aotearoa, New Zealand.
Email: Stefanie.Rixecker@lincoln.ac.nz |
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John K. Roth
is the Edward J. Sexton Professor Emeritus of Philosophy
and the Founding Director of the Center for the Study
of the Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights at Claremont
McKenna College. He has published hundreds of articles
and reviews, and authored, co-authored, or edited more
than forty books, including Genocide and Human Rights:
A Philosophical Guide (Palgrave Macmillan, 2005); Ethics
During and After the Holocaust: In the Shadow of Birkenau
(Palgrave Macmillan, 2005); and Anguished Hope: Holocaust
Scholars Confront the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict (Wm.
B. Eerdmans, 2008).
Email: jroth@cmc.edu |
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Victoria Sanford
is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Lehman College
and the Graduate Center, City University of New York.
She serves as a Research Associate at Columbia University’s
Center for International Conflict Resolu¬tion and
an Affiliated Scholar at Rutgers University’s Center
for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights. She is the
author of four books on Guatemala, including Buried Secrets:
Truth and Human Rights in Guatemala (Palgrave Macmillan,
2003). As a John Simon Guggenheim Fellow (2009–2010),
she is writing The Land of Pale Hands: Feminicide, Social
Cleansing and Impunity in Guatemala.
Email:
victoria.sanford@lehman.cuny.edu
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William Schabas
is Director of the Irish Centre for Human Rights, National
University of Ireland, Galway, where he is Professor of
Human Rights Law. He is the author of Genocide in International
Law: The Crime of Crimes (Cambridge University Press,
2nd edition, 2009), and many journal articles on legal
aspects of genocide. Professor Schabas was a member of
the Sierra Leone Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
He is an Officer of the Order of Canada and Member of
the Royal Irish Academy.
Email: william.schabas@nuigalway.ie
|
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Dominik J. Schaller
is Lecturer and Researcher at the Ruprecht-Karls-University,
Heidelberg, Germany. He is editor of the Journal of Genocide
Research and Executive Secretary of the International
Network of Genocide Scholars (INoGS). His main areas of
research are the history of mass violence, colonialism,
and modern African history. Schaller is the editor of
numerous volumes and articles on German colonial rule
in Africa, as well as the Armenian and Rwandan genocides.
E-mail: dominik.schaller@uni-heidelberg.de |
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Russell Schimmer
is currently a dual-degree J.D.-Ph.D. candidate at the
University of Connecticut. His Ph.D. research is on multi-temporal
spaceborne remote sensing of environmental change and
its applications to monitoring anthropogenic activities,
especially the large-scale violence characteristic of
genocide. His legal interests are primarily in developing
approaches to spaceborne remote sensing obtention and
admissibility. He also researches processes of largescale
mineral extraction, primarily global copper and gold mining.
Email: rschimme@earthlink.net |
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Jacques Sémelin
is Professor of Political Science (Sciences Po Paris,
Center for International Research and Studies). He is
author of Purify and Destroy: The Political Uses of Massacre
and Genocide (Columbia University Press, 2007), and founder
and editor-in-chief of the online Encyclopedia of Mass
Violence (Sciences Po, 2008),
www.massviolence.org. His
text in this volume is excerpted from his autobiography, J’arrive où je suis étranger, recently
published in French by Le Seuil.
Email: semelin@ceri-sciences-po.org |
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David J. Simon
is a Lecturer in the Department of Political Science at
Yale University. His research addresses development assistance,
post-conflict recovery, and reconciliation, focusing
in part on Rwanda. For the past five years, he has taught
a seminar entitled “The Rwandan Genocide in Comparative
Perspective.”
Email:
david.simon@yale.edu |
| |
Robert Skloot
retired from forty years of teaching, administrating and
stage directing at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
in 2008. He is the author and editor of many books and
essays about the theater of the Holocaust and genocide,
including the two-volume The Theatre of the Holocaust
(University of Wisconsin Press, 1982, 1999). His one-act
play, If the Whole Body Dies: Raphael Lemkin and the Treaty
against Genocide (Parallel Press, 2006), has been read
around the world.
Email: rskloot@wisc.edu |
| |
Christopher C.
Taylor is Professor of Anthropology at the
University of Alabama at Birmingham. He is the author
of Sacrifice as Terror: The Rwandan Genocide of 1994
(Berg,
1999). He has also written extensively about traditional
medicine in Rwanda, ethnicity, the state, and Rwanda’s
pre-genocidal media.
E-mail: ctaylor@uab.edu |
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Ernesto Verdeja
is Assistant Professor of Political Science and Peace
Studies at the University of Notre Dame. His research
interests are comparative genocide and theories of justice,
forgiveness, and reconciliation. He is the author of the
forthcoming Unchopping A Tree: Reconciliation in the Aftermath
of Political Violence (Temple University Press, 2009).
Email: everdeja@nd.edu |
| |
Joseph Robert
White is research assistant at the Center
for Advanced Holocaust Studies, and Adjunct Associate
Professor at the University of Maryland University College.
He holds a doctorate in Modern European history from the
University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and is editor of The Camps
and Ghettos of Germany’s Allies, Satellites, and
Collaborationist States, Volume 4 of The United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos
(Indiana University Press/USHMM). His articles have appeared
in Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Journal of Jewish Identities,
and Today’s Best Military Writing.
Email: historianjoe@yahoo.com |
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Benjamin Whitmer
lives and works in Denver, Colorado with
his wife and children. His first novel, Pike, is forthcoming
from PM Press.
Email: benjamin.whitmer@gmail.com |
| |
John C. Zimmerman
is an Associate Professor in the College of Business at
the University of Nevada Las Vegas. He is author of the
book Holocaust Denial: Demographics, Testimonies and Ideologies
(University Press of America, 2000). He has published
articles on Pearl Harbor revisionism, the Auschwitz death
camp, and radical Islam.
Email: john.zimmerman@unlv.edu |
| |
Lior Zylberman
is currently studying for his Masters in Communication
and Culture at the University of Buenos Aires. He is Associate
Professor of Design of Image and Sound at the University
of Buenos Aires, and a researcher on genocide, imagery,
and society. He has written several works on memory and
cinema.
Email: liorzylberman@gmail.com |
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