NEH Seminar Series, "Genocide, Justice and Human Rights" 2012-2013
This Series has been made possible by a generous grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Any views, findings, conclusions or recommendations expressed in this program do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
This Seminar Series is organized by Dr. Sarah K Danielsson, Associate Professor of History at CUNY-Queensborough. The Seminar series provides an academic program throughout the Academic year geared to different constituencies of the college community: faculty, students and the community at large. The program deals with the intersections of genocide, justice and human rights and is interdisciplinary in nature. Academic faculty and students from all universities and colleges are welcome to attend. For more information see contact information.
CONTACT INFORMATION:
For Information on this seminar series, please contact:
Dr. Sarah K Danielsson
Associate professor of History
CUNY-Queensborough
Office Phone: 718-281-5044
Email: [email protected]
MAY 3, 2013
Problems of Justice, Jurisdiction and Reconciliation in the Aftermath of Genocide
Kupferberg Holocaust Resource Center and Archives 10:30 am
Alex Hinton, Rutgers University
Daniel Feierstein, Universidad de Tres de Febrero, Argentina
Donna Frieze, Center for Jewish History and Deakin University, Australia
Victoria Sanford, CUNY-Lehman
Lawrence Douglas, Amherst College
APRIL 11, 2013 (RESCHEDULED)
Holding the Monster's Gaze:
The Fight Against Impunity in Latin America
Carlos Castresana Fernández
4:30-6:00pm
Room S112
Carlos Castresana Fernandez is the Public Prosecutor of the Supreme Court in Spain since 2005 with more than 30 years of professional experience as a Lawyer, Investigating Judge, Court Magistrate, Anti-drug Special Prosecutor, and over ten years as Special Anti-corruption Prosecutor.
He authored the lawsuit and subsequent legal reports building the legal strategy in the Pinochet Case before the Spanish Audiencia Nacional.
In 2007 he was appointed by the UN Secretary General as Head of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala, with the level of Assistant Secretary General. He resigned in 2010, after receiving the Legion of Honor from France, the Star of Solidarity from Italy, the Order of Civil Merit from Spain and the Great Cross of the Quetzal from Guatemala.
He has taken part as an expert in CoE, EU, and UN missions in Europe, Middle East and the Americas, and has lecturer at some of the most prominent universities and other institutions in Europe and America.
DECEMBER 5, 2012
Legacies of Mass Atrocities:
The Quest for Justice for the Disappeared in Argentina
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 2012, 6-9pm EST John Jay College of Criminal Justice
524 West 59th Street
New Building
Conference Room 9.64
PROGRAM:
Dr. SARAH K. DANIELSSON
Associate Professor, Department of History, CUNY-Queensborough
JUDGE CARLOS ROZANSKI
Argentinean judge presiding over genocide trials of the disappeared
NORA MORALES DE CORTIÑAS
Member of the Association of the Mothers of La Plaza de Mayo, Founding Line
Argentine women leading the search for their disappeared relatives
JOCK YOUNG
Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice
John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Moderated by:
NINA SCHNEIDER
Visiting Scholar at the Institute for the Study of Human Rights (ISHR),
Columbia University
NOVEMBER 15, 2012
THEA HALO
Author of
Not Even My Name: A True Story
“The Genocide of the Greeks of the Ottoman Empire
1913—1923: Myths and Facts”
Thursday, November 15, 2012 at 6:00 PM
Science Building
Room S-112
SEPTEMBER 7, 2012
Genocide and Human Rights: A Fraught relationship?
Friday September 7, 2012
CUNY Graduate Center, located corner of 5th Avenue and 34th Street
Room C197
One day workshop/conference.
PROGRAM:
9:00-9:30am Refreshments
9:30-9:40am Introduction
Sarah Danielsson
9:40-11:00am Session 1
"How Human Rights became Entangled with Holocaust Memory (and why we should regret it)"
Samuel Moyn, Columbia University
"How and Why did Genocide become a Non-Political Crime?"
A. Dirk Moses, European University Institute
11:00-11:30am Coffee Break
11:30-12:50 Session 2
"Toward a Critical History of Human Rights"
Eric Weitz, City College of New York
"Genocide and Human Rights: From Civilization to Democracy"
Devin Pendas, Boston College
12:50-2:00pm Lunch
2:00-3:20 Session 3
"What is genocide (as we now use the term)?"
Jens Meierhenrich, London School of Economics
"Silenced Communities in the Aftermath of Genocide and War in Guatemala"
Marcia Esparza, John Jay college of Criminal Justice
3:20-3:50pm Coffee Break
3:50-5:00pm Session 4
"What's in a Name? Mass Violence, Human Rights Crime and the Question of Genocide in Indonesia and East Timor"
Brad Simpson, Princeton University
"Where Fellow-Travelers Part Ways: Genocide and Human Rights through Law, Narrative, Politics and Ethics"
Bridget Conley-Zilkic, Tufts University