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Social Science Research Council The SSRC is an independent, international, nonprofit organization. It fosters innovative research, nurtures new generations of social scientists, deepens how inquiry is practiced within and across disciplines, and mobilizes necessary knowledge on important public issues. Programs SSRC activities span more than 80 countries on 6 continents Fellowships & Prizes Apply for research opportunities across the globe Support the SSRC Contributions fund research and scholarship worldwide Items Items is a space for engagement with insights from the work of the Council and the social sciences. Ethics of Transregional Research and the Covid-19 Pandemic by Jamie Monson Transforming Public Safety and Urban Infrastructure to Mitigate Climate and Public Health Disasters by Marccus D. Hendricks History Lessons: Can We Learn from the Past? by Rosemary C. R. Taylor The Immanent Frame The Immanent Frame publishes interdisciplinary perspectives on religion, secularism, and the public sphere. Are societies religious? (Or is there a better question?) by John R. Bowen Practices of relation: Baer and Imhoff by Marc David Baer and Sarah Imhoff Pandemic security and insecurity in the Gulf by Neha Vora Kujenga Amani Kujenga Amani facilitates the exchange of ideas about diverse aspects of peacebuilding in Africa. Regimes of Othering: Unpacking the Migration-Security Nexus by Margaret Monyani Responding to the Covid-19 Pandemic in Tanzania: The Role of Solidarity, National Unity, and Peace by Iddy Ramadhani Magoti Refugees and Migrants – A Blind Spot in Ghana’s Covid-19 Response? by Amanda Coffie MediaWell Donate Insights from the Social Sciences Search Menu Search Menu How Genocides End Analyzing the various ways in which genocides have ended, including both case studies as well as comparative and theoretical analyses. December 21, 2006 Category General Eisenhower at the Nazi concentration camp Dachau is one of the iconic images of the 20th century: the liberator in his moment of triumph contemplates the victims of atrocity he arrived too late to save. Just as the Nazi Holocaust of European Jewry is the paradigm of modern genocide, so too is military-humanitarian intervention the Holy Grail for contemporary advocates for ending genocide. Genocide scholarship has been empirical and analytical in its investigation of the origins of genocide. Its treatment of the ending of genocide has generally been normative and exhortatory. The historical study of the de-escalation of mass group-targeted killing, whether a transitory lull or a definitive end to the violence, is a significant lacuna in the field. This web forum aims to fill that gap, soliciting contributions from scholars and specialists on the subject, including case studies of how particular genocides have ended, and comparative and theoretical analyses of the question. How Genocides End Colonial Legacy, Elite Dissension and the Making of Genocide: The Story of Biafra by Sam Amadi “The Nigeria civil war broke out on 6 July 1967. The war was the culmination of an uneasy peace and stability that had plagued the nation since independence in 1960. This situation had its genesis in the geography, culture and demography of Nigeria.” – Major Abubakar A Atofarati Introduction Between 1964 and 1970, the Ibos […] Read more January 10, 2007 How Genocides End Averting Genocide in the Nuba Mountains, Sudan by Alex De Waal Introduction The counterinsurgency fought by the Government of Sudan against the rebels of the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) in the Nuba Mountains of central Sudan during the early 1990s was not only exceptionally violent, but also aimed at depopulating the area of civilians. Not only did the government aim to defeat the SPLA forces […] Read more December 22, 2006 How Genocides End Why the Discipline of “Genocide Studies” Has Trouble Explaining How Genocides End? by Dirk Moses Introduction “Genocide Studies” is no ordinary academic discipline. It seeks knowledge in the service of an urgent moral imperative: the prediction, prevention, and interdiction of genocides. An activist fervor drives the social scientist beyond the ivory tower. The American-based “International Association of Genocide Scholars,” for instance, has called its new journal Genocide Studies and Prevention, and […] Read more December 22, 2006 How Genocides End Using What We Know: Politicizing Knowledge and Scholarship to Stop Group Violence by Hugo Slim Case studies of group-targeted violence reveal the enormous amount that the academic community knows about the context, design and implementation of genocidal politics. Much of the analysis in the historical or regional studies contributions has, of course, been crucially informed by the extraordinary achievements of Holocaust studies in the last 55 years. Insights from landmark […] Read more December 22, 2006 How Genocides End Crawling Back from the Brink: How Conflict Resolution Can Respond to Genocide by Melanie Greenberg Introduction Many in the conflict resolution field (and, to an even greater degree, in military and other “hard-line” sectors) feel that genocide is too powerful a destructive force to respond to the tools of conflict resolution. In fact, conflict resolution in a multitude of forms, including operational conflict prevention, structural conflict prevention, post-conflict justice procedures […] Read more December 22, 2006 How Genocides End Reflections on How Genocidal Killings are Brought to an End by Alex De Waal and Bridget Conley-Zilkic Genocide and the canon of historical tragedy Stepping from 14th Street in Washington, DC into the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, the visitor to the main exhibition is immediately placed in the shoes of the soldiers of the U.S. Army as they liberated the concentration camp at Dachau in 1944. The personal recollections of General Eisenhower […] Read more December 22, 2006 How Genocides End From Pearl to Pariah: The Origin, Unfolding and Termination of State-Inspired Genocidal Persecution in Uganda, 1980-85 by Sabiiti Mutengesa Introduction Even the most cursory glance at the emergence of the country we now call Uganda leaves one convinced that, at some stage, it was inevitable that the country would go from being the “Pearl of Africa,” so dubbed by Winston Churchill in 1908, to the all-around epitome of Third World malaise that earned residents […] Read more December 21, 2006 About Items From Our Programs From Our Fellows Essay Collections Items Archive News Twitter Facebook Youtube Social Science Research Council 300 Cadman Plaza West, 15th Floor Brooklyn , NY 11201 , USA 212-377-2700 Privacy Policy Directions to the SSRC Creative Commons Employment Contact Us Mobilizing social science for the public good. The Social Science Research Council, an independent, international nonprofit, mobilizes necessary knowledge for the public good by supporting scholars worldwide, generating new research across disciplines, and linking researchers with policymakers and citizens. Sign up for Council Update, the SSRC's monthly newsletter Online Form - Council Update Signup By subscribing, you agree that the SSRC may process your information in accordance with our privacy policy . Close About Items Essay Collections From Our Programs From Our Fellows Items Archive Social Science Research Council Items The Immanent Frame Kujenga Amani MediaWell Donate...
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