[URBANTH-L]CFP: Genocide: The Future of Prevention (Sheffield/UK)

Angela Jancius jancius at ohio.edu
Tue Jun 10 09:53:24 EDT 2008


From: Juergen Zimmerer < j.zimmerer[at]sheffield.ac.uk >
Subject: CFP: Genocide: The Future of Prevention
Date: Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Call for Papers

Genocide: The Future of Prevention
1st Global Conference on Genocide
by the International Network of Genocide Scholars
at the Centre for the Study of Genocide
and Mass Violence/The University of Sheffield/UK
9 - 12 January 2009


In December 2008 the world will celebrate the 60th anniversary of the UN 
"Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide" 
(1948). Politicians all over the world will praise its achievements and 
the progress made so far in the fight against genocide. And rightly so, 
as the achievements are many, mainly in the area of punishment and 
mobilisation of public opinion. The Convention firmly rooted genocide in 
international law, which is increasingly successful in bringing 
perpetrators of genocide to trial. Genocide as a crime is now also part 
of public consciousness (at least in most parts of the world), and 
Non-Governmental Organizations in particular campaign tirelessly against 
mass violence. The devotion of hundred of thousands to the cause of 
human rights and the rule of law warrants recognition and applause.

Prevention, however has failed. If the people of Darfur, Chad, DR Congo 
or Zimbabwe, to name but a few, were invited to the celebrations of the 
Convention, the world would get a rather grim picture. On almost all 
continents, people are persecuted, expelled or killed because of their 
race, religion, gender or political affiliation. Collective violence, 
whether organised and conducted by states or sub-state actors, is 
endemic in many regions, and despite all the human rights rhetoric the 
international community closes its eyes or sits on its hands.

This failure, however, cannot only be blamed on political elites alone. 
Genocide Studies, as an academic discipline, is responsible as well. The 
failure of the international community to develop effective mechanisms 
for prevention is paralleled by academia's seeming incapacity to 
critically reflect on the dilemmas of prevention as well as to develop 
new theoretical approaches that escape the limitations of the control 
paradigm (Oxford Research Group), which rests on the misleading and 
dangerous assumption that global security can be guaranteed and threads 
controlled by military force rather than addressing the root causes of 
conflict. Traditional ideas about prevention, which see genocide as a 
dysfunction of an otherwise working international political and economic 
system that can be contained by policing, have not been developed 
further to offer satisfying answers to the many challenges of the 21st 
century, especially the relationship between global injustice and 
violence or environmental change and genocide, which will in all 
likelihood drastically increase the occurrence of genocidal moments.

In order to address these pressing questions, the International Network 
of Genocide Scholars (INoGS; < http://www.inogs.com >) together with the 
Centre for the Study of Genocide and Mass Violence (SGMV) at The 
University of Sheffield/UK (< http://www.genocidecentre.dept.shef.ac.uk 
 >) will dedicate the 1st Global Conference on Genocide, Sheffield, 9-12 
January 2009 to sustainable genocide prevention for the 21st century. 
"Genocide: The Future of Prevention", the inaugural event in INOGS' 
biannual series of Global Genocide Conferences, will take stock of 
Genocide Studies and move on to develop new ideas about prevention.

We therefore invite suggestions for panels and papers on all aspects of 
the study of genocide and mass violence, past, present and future. 
Submissions should reach us no later than 15 July 2008. Brief abstracts 
(250 words per paper, panel suggestions should additionally briefly 
state the rationale of the panel, including short CVs and institutional 
affiliation; all in one word file) should be e-mailed to Tricia 
Ellis-Evans (< tricia at paceprojects.co.uk >).

Topics of particular interest would include (but are not restricted to) 
the following:

-Prevention
-International law and genocide
-Education and genocide prevention
-Holocaust and its representation
-Genocide in art, literature and film
-Colonial mass violence
-Cultural genocide and ethnocide
-Reconciliation, restitution and recognition
-Genocide denial
-Politics of apology
-Forms of remembrance and memory politics
-Climate change and mass violence
-Social origins of mass violence
-Genocide and the International Order
-Humanitarian interventions: chances and problems
-Gender and violence
- Late Ottoman population policy
- Soviet mass violence
- From Indonesia to Cambodia: genocides in Cold War Asia
- From Biafra to Darfur: mass violence in post independence Africa

We would be grateful, if you circulate this cfp as widely as possible.

Juergen Zimmerer
Director, Centre for the Study of
Genocide and Mass Violence/ University of Sheffield,

Humanities Research Institute
The University of Sheffield
34 Gell Street
Sheffield
S3 7QY

< http://www.genocidecentre.dept.shef.ac.uk/ >
< j.zimmerer at sheffield.ac.uk >


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