GAL-Question #14
Posted in Genocide Awareness Lecture on Nov 4th, 2008
Why is there very little said about the German influence on Turkey, prior to, during, and after the Genocide?
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Posted in Genocide Awareness Lecture on Nov 4th, 2008
Why is there very little said about the German influence on Turkey, prior to, during, and after the Genocide?
Posted in Genocide Awareness Lecture on Nov 4th, 2008
Can you comment on the idea that drought in sub-saharan Africa gives rise to genocidal acts?
Posted in Genocide Awareness Lecture on Oct 29th, 2008
Question from the audience:
Prof. Bloxham spoke of particular problems that can be identified prior to a turn to homicidal genocide. Can you speak to moments or ways to ‘catch’ a genocide before it reaches its full potential, or even before it becomes genocide–either historically looking at cases that were caught and avoided in process, or [...]
Posted in Genocide Awareness Lecture on Oct 29th, 2008
Question from the audience:
To what degree do you see contextual factors at work in the U.S. occupation of Iraq that has led to wanton killing of the civilian population?
Posted in Genocide Awareness Lecture on Oct 29th, 2008
Question from the audience:
How does the increasing population increase the violence? Would you consider the crusade movement in Jerusalem to be genocide?
Posted in Genocide Awareness Lecture on Oct 29th, 2008
Question from the audience:
How can we reconcile contrasts and comparisons between the Holocaust and other genocides?
Posted in Genocide Awareness Lecture on Oct 29th, 2008
Question from the audience:
How do we go about healing a genocidal world? How should we deal with the Armenian genocide? What should the international community do to preserve its memory?
Posted in Genocide Awareness Lecture on Oct 29th, 2008
Question from the audience:
Is the study of genocide bolstered or hampered by the ethno-religious attachments of the individuals who would study genocides? That is, do particular nationalistic affiliations render genocide studies hopelessly subjective? Does scholarly rigor and political effectiveness require a kind of universalistic detachment from ethno-religious affiliation?
Posted in Genocide Awareness Lecture on Oct 29th, 2008
Question from the audience:
Thinking about genocides not as “volcanic” episodes, but as “landscapes”: What are the conditions that characterize colonial societies? Within such societies, what conditions give rise to the ethnic violence that commands popular attention? In nations such as Rwanda–nations wracked by racist colonization–how is the “landscape” distorted such that the Hutus could develop [...]
Posted in Genocide Awareness Lecture on Oct 29th, 2008
Question from the audience:
What steps can we take toward a new definition or a new way to intervene with genocide?