|
April 3, 2007
International Journal Genocide Studies and Prevention
Successfully Completes 1st Year
The
Inaugural year of Genocide Studies and
Prevention: An International Journal (GSP)
has been successfully completed with the
release of its third issue.
On this occasion,
Dr. Roger W. Smith, Chair of the
International Institute for Genocide and
Human Rights Studies, remarked that “it has
been extremely gratifying to witness the
strong reception of the journal from Los
Angles to Yerevan, Buenos Aries to Athens,
and Toronto to Jerusalem. That the journal
is being read and has contributors from all
over the world is directly in line with its
mission to create an academic forum on
genocide that will help young and older
scholars, policy-makers and the general
public alike better understand the
phenomenon of genocide and promote the
necessity of preventing it.”
GSP V1, N3 opens with an article, “Genocide
and Atrocity Crimes,” by David Scheffer,
Professor of Law and Director of the Center
for International Human Rights, Northwestern
University and formerly United States
Ambassador for War Crimes. He argues that by
separating the criminal aspect of genocide
from its political reality, focus can be
placed on the need for more effective
international intervention. His two
propositions are to liberate the use of the
term genocide from governments and
international organizations and, more
generally, to substitute the new concepts of
atrocity crimes and atrocity law for the
actual legal, political and public
terminology used regarding the crime of
genocide, crimes against humanity and war
crimes. GSP V2, N1 will have a series of
expert responses to Scheffer’s
thought-provoking and groundbreaking
research on the definition of genocide,
international law and intervention.
The other articles in
GSP V1, N3 deal with
Darfur, early warning in Haiti, and the
Armenian and Assyrian Genocides. They are as
follows:
- “Labelling
“Genocide” in Sudan: A Constructionist
Analysis of Darfur,” William F.S. Miles,
Professor of Political Science, Northeastern
University;
- “Anti-Haitianism, Historical Memory, and
the Potential for Genocidal Violence in the
Dominican Republic,” Edward Paulino,
Assistant Professor of History, John Jay
College of Criminal Justice, CUNY;
- “The Restless World of Leonardo Alishan
(1951–January 2005): A Burnt Offering on the
Altar of the Armenian Genocide,” Rubina
Peroomian, Associate Researcher at the
Department of Near Eastern Languages and
Cultures, UCLA;
- “Deportation and Massacres in the Cipher
Telegrams of the Interior Ministry in the
Prime Ministerial Archive (Babakanlık Arivi),”
Taner Akçam, Visiting Associate Professor of
History at the University of Minnesota;
- “’Native Christians Massacred’: The
Ottoman Genocide of the Assyrians during
World War I,” Hannibal Travis, Assistant
Professor of Law, Florida International
University.
Previously in the
first volume, special issues explored the
first genocide of the 21st century, Darfur,
and the Armenian Genocide, the archetypal
genocide of the 20th century.
Genocide Studies and
Prevention was co-founded by the
International Association of Genocide
Scholars (IAGS) and the International
Institute for Genocide and Human Rights
Studies (A Division of the Zoryan
Institute). It is the official journal of
the IAGS and is published three times a year
by the University of Toronto Press.
Subscriptions are $50.00 per year, but a
discount is available for purchasing the
complete inaugural volume. For more
information, contact the IIGHRS (Zoryan
Institute),
admin@genocidestudies.org, Tel:
416-250-9807.
|