Why do people resort to genocide and other mass atrocity crimes?
Frank Chalk
- Professor Emeritus
- Department of History
- genocide studies5
- Holocaust history3
- nationalism17
- human rights28
- propaganda3
- 'ordinary killers'
- ideologies of hate
- mass atrocities6
- responsibility to protect
- humanitarian intervention2
- trauma and resilience26
- public history5
- transnational politics9
- foreign policy3
- American foreign policy3
- African studies23
- war and organized violence21
- international law5
- United Nations3
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Steven High
oral history, public history, working class studies
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Max Bergholz
intercommunal violence, nationalism, historical memory
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Elena Razlogova
USA history, Cold War, Soviet history
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Anna Sheftel
oral history, historical memory, trauma and resilience
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Nicole De Silva
international relations, international cooperation, international law
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Elizabeth Bloodgood
international relations, NGOs, INGOs
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Aditya Dewan
Indigenous studies, South Asia, human rights
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Matthew Penney
Japanese history, postwar history, popular culture
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Julian Spencer-Churchill (Schofield)
international relations, war and organized violence, security studies
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Josée Leclerc
the witness function of art, survival strategies, trauma and resilience
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Mary Ellen Davis
film/media production, social justice education, documentary making
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Marie-Pier Joly
mental health, migration studies, health and wellness
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Sam Rowan
climate change, international relations, globalization
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Océane Jasor
gender and sexuality, gender politics, decolonization
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Michael Ferguson
Ottoman Empire, enslaved Africans, diasporas
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Lisa Ndejuru
Black wellness, arts in health, trauma and resilience
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Razan AlSalah
media arts, critical geography, Palestine
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Natalie Kouri-Towe
gender and sexuality, international solidarity activism, solidarity across difference
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Daniel Douek
war and organized violence, South Africa, insurgency/counterinsurgency
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Amy Swiffen
social and political theory, law and society, social deviance/conformity
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Bina Freiwald
autobiography, subjectivity, women's writing
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Gavin Foster
Irish history, Irish studies, cultural history
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Andrew Ivaska
African studies, political movements, 'global 1960s'
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Ursula (Ulla) Neuerburg-Denzer
acting, physical theatre, affect studies
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Cynthia Quarrie
British literature, contemporary literature, ethics
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Genevieve Renard Painter
Indigenous-Settler relations, law and society, social justice
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Graham Carr
20th century, North American history, Canadian cultural history