Monthly Archives: March 2024

Bibliography: Genocide (Part 14 of 36)

Freedman, Sarah Warshauer; Samuelson, Beth Lewis (2010). Language Policy, Multilingual Education, and Power in Rwanda. Language Policy, v9 n3 p191-215 Aug. The evolution of Rwanda's language policies since 1996 has played and continues to play a critical role in social reconstruction following war and genocide. Rwanda's new English language policy aims to drop French and install English as the only language of instruction. The policy-makers frame the change as a major factor in the success of social and education reforms aimed at promoting reconciliation and peace and increasing Rwanda's participation in global economic development. However, in Rwanda, the language one speaks is construed as an indicator of group affiliations and identity. Furthermore, Rwanda has the potential to develop a multilingual educational policy that employs its national language, Kinyarwanda (Ikinyarwanda, Rwanda), to promote mass literacy and a literate, multilingual populace. Rwanda's situation can serve as a case study for the ongoing roles that language policy plays in the politics of power…. [Direct]

Model, David (2007). American Transgressive Interventions: The Question of Genocide. College Quarterly, v10 n4 p1-8 Fall. This author, a teacher of political science and liberal studies, states his belief that challenging students to examine and analyze radical ideas develops their capacity to think clearly and skeptically. Following in this spirit, this essay examines the discrepancy between the stated objectives of American foreign policy and its practice. The author contends that this discrepancy is best exemplified by the apogee of war crimes: genocide. In support of his belief, he presents an analysis of two cases: Iraq and East Timor. The former is an example of direct guilt, the latter of complicity…. [PDF]

Ducey, Kimberley A. (2009). Using Simon Wiesenthal's \The Sunflower\ to Teach the Study of Genocide and the Holocaust. College Teaching, v57 n3 p167-176 Sum. The author discusses a project called \\The Sunflower\ Symposium,\ named in honor of Simon Wiesenthal's \The Sunflower\ (1998). The project was a catalyst for discussions on legalized discrimination, the infringement of civil rights, (in)justice, (in)tolerance, and civic responsibility, influencing students to connect the Holocaust to other world events. It proved an effective pedagogic method for examining critically and taking action on important global issues. Evidence of the effectiveness of this message is presented and suggestions for integrating literature into courses are offered. (Contains 3 notes.)… [Direct]

Brown, James G. (2007). Teaching about Genocide in a New Millennium. Social Education, v71 n1 p21-23 Jan-Feb. The \Darfur is Dying\ website was the winning entry of a contest called Darfur Digital Activist, launched by MTV's 24-hour college network (mtvU). The site describes the winning game as \a narrative-based simulation where the user negotiates forces that threaten the survival of his or her refugee camp. It offers a faint glimpse of what it is like for the more than 2.5 million who have been internally displaced by the crisis in Sudan.\ In this article, the author expresses his views on the appropriateness of using computer-based simulation as a way of teaching students about genocide. The author stands by his position: the use of the \Darfur is Dying\ simulation was inappropriate. His hope is that the way new technologies are used will help students to access authentic information from primary sources. Placed within the context of multiple authentic experiences, game-like simulations may aid the process of dialogue and subsequent critical consciousness that leads to action. Even the… [Direct]

McClelland, Nicole (2008). Power to the Pupils. Teaching Tolerance, n34 p52-53 Fall. Anyone who laments that American young people are apathetic, uninvolved or not sufficiently outraged clearly is not up on the news. This article presents some news illustrating that young people are involved on some issues concerning the environment, the improvement of their schools, justice, the affordability of higher education, fairer immigrant wages, the war, and genocide…. [Direct]

Totten, Samuel (2006). The Tenth Commemoration of the Srebrenica Genocide. Social Education, v70 n4 p209-214 May-Jun. The genocide in Srebrenica was the largest single act of genocide in Europe in 50 years, or since the Naziperpetrated Holocaust. In this article, the author was invited by the Bosnian foreign ministry to attend a 10-year commemoration of the genocide on July 11, 2005. It was followed by an international conference in Sarajevo, "The International Scientific Conference on the Genocide against the Bosniaks of UN Safe Area Srebrenica in July 1995–Lessons for Future Generations," on July 12-14 2005. The author states that the focus of the conference had been, in part, the lessons learned from the tragedy of Srebrenica. Many scholars considered this angle, both in their talks and during informal conversations. (Contains 4 notes.)… [Direct]

Manoogian, Margaret M.; Richards, Leslie N.; Walker, Alexis J. (2007). Gender, Genocide, and Ethnicity: The Legacies of Older Armenian American Mothers. Journal of Family Issues, v28 n4 p567-589. Women use legacies to help family members articulate family identity, learn family history, and provide succeeding generations with information about family culture. Using feminist standpoint theory and the life-course perspective, this qualitative study examined the intergenerational transmissions that 30 older Armenian American mothers received and transmitted to succeeding generations within the sociohistorical experience of genocide. Mothers passed on legacies that included family stories, rituals/activities, and possessions. Because of multiple losses during the Armenian Genocide, they emphasized legacies that symbolized connection to family, underscored family cohesion, and accentuated ethnic identity. Tensions were evident as well because women's sense of responsibility for legacies clashed with their limited cultural knowledge, few inherited possessions, and the inevitable assimilation of their children and grandchildren into the dominant U.S. culture…. [Direct]

Colatrella, Steven (2011). Nothing Exceptional: Against Agamben. Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, v9 n1 p96-125 May. Giorgio Agamben's work has become widely influential as a guide to explaining the extra-constitutional powers assumed by governments under the rubric of the War on Terror. His formulations, such as Homo Sacer and State of Exception, have been extended to apply to a wide variety of experiences of repression of liberties or social control, including the repression of Roma in Europe, of undocumented immigrants, and others. This essay argues, however, that Agamben's approach, while insightful and well-meaning, is potentially disastrous for the defense of the very liberties that those utilizing them seek to protect. By demonstrating that Agamben's categories were developed without reference to crucial historical experiences, including slavery and anti-slavery, genocide against indigenous peoples and enclosures of common land and resources, fail to provide either a convincing explanation for the rise of the phenomena he critiques, or a plausible strategy for confronting or reversing them…. [PDF]

Lacroix, Marie; Sabbah, Charlotte (2011). Posttraumatic Psychological Distress and Resettlement: The Need for a Different Practice in Assisting Refugee Families. Journal of Family Social Work, v14 n1 p43-53. Social work practitioners are increasingly confronted with couples and families who have come from war-torn countries. Refugees may have experienced genocide, organized violence, ethnic wars, displacement, and losses of various kinds. Such experiences will often be carried through the post-migratory period and obscure legitimate individual and family processes that are often evaluated through a psychopathology lens. In this context, there is a pressing need to be attentive to refugee situations around the world and to issues related to forced migration and its impact on families. In an attempt to fill the gap in the literature on intervention with refugee families, this article presents two of the most compelling aspects of the refugee experience that can have a lasting impact on families and couples: premigration traumatic events and their potential impact on the refugee resettlement experience, and postmigration social and psychological experiences. The concept of \trauma\ is… [Direct]

Tusiime, Michael (2013). Toward Democratic Education and Transformational Learning: An Examination of Students' Experiences at Kigali Institute of Education. ProQuest LLC, Ed.D. Dissertation, Northern Illinois University. This dissertation examines the experiences of Kigali Institute of Education students using a framework of democratic education theories. In Rwanda, the discriminatory and non-critical education system is believed to have been one of the major causes for the civil strife that has characterized the country, beginning in its post independence to its culmination in the 1994 genocide. These injustices have been associated with the colonial education system that promoted cultural supremacy over the indigenous populations. Also, such injustices can be blamed on education's failure to incorporate issues of social justice during the educational reconstruction in post-colonial times. After 1994, Rwanda instituted educational reforms, in part, to facilitate the process of democracy, peace building and active citizenship. By reviewing curriculum documents and conducting in-depth and focus group interviews, this study sought to analyze students' and teachers' experiences in light of the post-1994… [Direct]

Realon, Michael S. (2013). "Here's to the Crazy Ones:" Legendary Words Spark Educators and Businesses. Techniques: Connecting Education and Careers (J3), v88 n2 p48-51 Feb. During the summer of 2006, as part of a court ruling, Olympic High School of Charlotte-Mecklenberg School (CMS) District, was accused of committing "academic genocide" against its students and was threatened to be taken over by the state of North Carolina. However, in 2005, Olympic had earlier won a $1.2 million grant from a high school change agent associated with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. By the time of the ruling, the school was already deeply engaged in a transformation to become a campus of five theme-based small high schools: International Business and Communications Studies; Biotechnology and Health; Global Studies and Economics; Arts and Humanities; and Math, Engineering, Technology and Science. The school improved immediately. In fact, just five years after Olympic became a small schools campus, the CMS district conducted an exhaustive study about the performance of its schools because of serious impending cost cuts which would require closing many… [Direct]

Devlieger, Patrick; Ghesquiere, Pol; Karangwa, Evariste (2007). The Grassroots Community in the Vanguard of Inclusion: The Post-Genocide Rwandan Prospects. International Journal of Inclusive Education, v11 n5-6 p607-626 Sep. More than a decade has passed since Rwanda was plunged into the most atrocious genocide of our time. Hundreds of thousands of lives were lost and many more were left in desperate conditions. The economic and social reconstruction of the country has since dominated the national agenda for recovery. It is within this reform agenda that this paper looks at the situation of the post-genocide young people with disabilities and the possible pathways for their inclusion. It points out that it is not all gloomy news. In the face of the challenging socio-economic situations, the search for appropriate inclusion models for Rwanda should be guided by two important factors: The lessons learnt from the past mistakes, and by exploring alternative prospects that may involve rediscovering the untapped potentials within the grassroots communities…. [Direct]

Chadderton, Charlotte; Preston, John (2012). Rediscovering "Race Traitor": Towards a Critical Race Theory Informed Public Pedagogy. Race, Ethnicity and Education, v15 n1 p85-100. This article attempts to politically resituate Ignatiev and Garvey's conception of the "Race Traitor" within contemporary notions of Critical Race Theory and Public Pedagogy. Race Traitor has been critiqued both by those on the academic and neo-conservative right, who accuse advocates of the project of genocide and misuse of public funds, and has a number of critics on the left who consider that the project is misguided, posturing and self-affirming for guilty whites and politically untenable. There are also post-structuralist critiques of the "Race Traitor" position, which overstate its focus on embodiment and the post-racial as opposed to its concrete suggestions for resisting racial oppression. In this article we argue that Race Traitor must be situated within the politics of its time, which is within anarchist and Marxist politics, and that this contextualisation enables one to consider Race Traitor as a political form with resonance for contemporary Marxists,… [Direct]

Fein, Helen, Ed.; Freedman-Apsel, Joyce, Ed. (1992). Teaching about Genocide. A Guidebook for College and University Teachers: Critical Essays, Syllabi, and Assignments. This guidebook is an outgrowth of a 1991 conference on \Teaching about Genocide on the College Level.\ The book is designed as an introduction to the subject of genocide to encourage more teachers to develop new courses and/or integrate aspects of the history of genocide into the curriculum. The book is divided into two parts. Part 1, \Assumptions and Issues,\ contains the essays: (1) \The Uniqueness and Universality of the Holocaust\ (Michael Berenbaum); (2) \Teaching about Genocide in an Age of Genocide\ (Helen Fein); (3) \Presuppositions and Issues about Genocide\ (Frank Chalk); and (4) \Moral Education and Teaching\ (Mary Johnson). Part 2, \Course Syllabi and Assignments,\ contains materials on selected subject areas, such as anthropology, history, history/sociology, literature, political science, psychology, and sociology. Materials include: \Teaching about Genocide\ (Joyce Freedman-Apsel); (2) \Destruction and Survival of Indigenous Societies\ (Hilda Kuper); (3) \Genocide in… [PDF]

Mickelson, Roslyn Arlin, Ed.; Nelson, Amy Hawn, Ed.; Smith, Stephen Samuel, Ed. (2015). Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow: School Desegregation and Resegregation in Charlotte. Harvard Education Press "Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow" provides a compelling analysis of the forces and choices that have shaped the trend toward the resegregation of public schools. By assembling a wide range of contributors–historians, sociologists, economists, and education scholars–the editors provide a comprehensive view of a community's experience with desegregation and economic development. Here we see resegregation through the lens of Charlotte, North Carolina, once a national model of successful desegregation, and home of the landmark Swann desegregation case, which gave rise to school busing. This book recounts the last forty years of Charlotte's desegregation and resegregation, putting education reform in political and economic context. Within a decade of the Swann case, the district had developed one of the nation's most successful desegregation plans, measured by racial balance and improved academic outcomes for both black and white students. However, beginning in the 1990s, this… [Direct]

15 | 2486 | 21920 | 25031222

Bibliography: Genocide (Part 15 of 36)

Kiang, Peter Nien-chu; Lin, Nancy J.; Suyemoto, Karen L. (2009). Education as Catalyst for Intergenerational Refugee Family Communication about War and Trauma. Communication Disorders Quarterly, v30 n4 p195-207. This article describes influences on intergenerational communication within refugee families about sociocultural trauma and explores how education may positively affect this communication process. Drawing on qualitative research and grounded theory through a larger study concerning intergenerational effects of and communication about trauma in Cambodian American refugee families, this article highlights ways that education may contribute to healing broken narratives within refugee families affected by war and genocide. Although focusing on Cambodian American experiences, we suggest that the role of education may be similarly helpful in facilitating intergenerational communication for other individuals with personal and familial experiences with trauma, such as students from refugee families who have fled Vietnam, Somalia, Bosnia, and other sites of forced migration. (Contains 1 note.)… [Direct]

Mooney, Carolyn (2009). The Arts & Academe. Chronicle of Higher Education, v55 n19 pB11 Jan. This article reports that for the opening of a huge new life-sciences building on its campus, Syracuse University wanted to capture the sense of expansiveness shared by architecture and science. It commissioned the composer Robert Ward to write a musical composition, \In Praise of Science,\ which was performed at the building's dedication late last year. A former dean of the college, who knew Ward's music, first had the idea while attending a concert of the brass ensemble. In this article, the author also reports on a theater partnership which grapples with legacy of Rwandan genocide; a documentary which features Pennsylvania State University's Blue Band; and a recent Yankees fielder who shows his pluck at a conservatory…. [Direct]

Totten, Samuel (2006). Rwanda: A Nation Resilient in the Aftermath of Genocide. Social Education, v70 n7 p415-422 Nov-Dec. Twelve years after the 1994 genocide, Rwanda remains a beautiful, but wounded nation. It is a nation full of hope–one comprised of resilient people working to rebuild a nation that was largely destroyed, when 800,000 Tutsis and moderate Hutus were murdered in some 90 days during what is known as the machete genocide. In this article, the author shares his sadness at what he discovered about the genocide when he visited Rwanda. He visited several genocide memorial sites, attended two "gacaca" meetings, and viewed recently discovered or disinterred bodies and skeletons of victims. Based on his discoveries, the author observes how Rwanda continues to be an open wound–the division and murderous rage have not totally dissipated. As such, the author believes that there is a moral imperative for the international community to reach out to Rwanda and help this small, scarred nation regain stability and forge a better future for all its people. (Contains 2 notes.)… [Direct]

Chalk, Frank; Jonassohn, Kurt (1991). Genocide: An Historical Overview. Social Education, v55 n2 p92-96,129 Feb. Exploring the historical origins of genocide, finds it has been practiced worldwide throughout history. Points out that genocide is the ultimate violation of human rights. Outlines legal definitions and identifies twentieth-century genocides. Examines common features of ideological genocides and presents questions for class discussion. (NL)…

Freeman, Michael (1987). The Puzzle of Genocide. Social Science Record, v24 n2 p15-17 Fall. Recognizes the difficulties involved in trying to define the term \genocide\ and how concepts such as \cultural genocide\ and \political genocide\ affect debate on the subject. Argues that to be clearly understood, genocide must be defined widely enough to identify appropriate cases, yet narrowly enough that it is not trivialized. (GEA)…

McLean Hilker, Lyndsay (2011). The Role of Education in Driving Conflict and Building Peace: The Case of Rwanda. Prospects: Quarterly Review of Comparative Education, v41 n2 p267-282 Jun. This article considers the relationship between education, conflict, and peacebuilding in Rwanda. First, it examines the role that education played in the lead-up to the 1994 genocide, discussing whether and how the low levels of educational attainment, inequalities of access, curricular content, and teaching methods contributed to the conditions for violence. It then looks at approaches to rebuilding the education sector since 1994. Despite significant progress, for example in widening access and achieving gender parity at primary level, three significant challenges remain. First, educational opportunity continues to be unequal in the post-primary sector, with disparities of access between rich and poor, a severe lack of alternative and non-formal educational opportunities, and some ethnic dimensions to the disparities. Second, tensions remain over history teaching due to government attempts to impose a single "official" narrative of Rwanda's history. Finally, teaching… [Direct]

Stone, Frank Andrews (1984). Teaching Genocide Awareness in Multicultural Education. Ethnic Studies Bulletin Number Six. Rationales, approaches, and constraints on genocide awareness education at all school levels are discussed. It is critical that students, especially U.S. students who live in a culturally pluralistic society, be made aware of how genocide was perpetrated in the past and of the fact that it is still happening today. A basic genocide awareness glossary is provided. Seven approaches to genocide awareness education are discussed: (1) an international law and world order theme; (2) socio-economic inquiries concerning the causes of genocide; (3) historical studies; (4) affective interpretations based on first-hand accounts; (5) human rights activism; (6) recognition of those who refuse to take part in genocide; and (7) the development of theoretical models of genocide prevention. Four constraints on genocide awareness education are examined: it is uncomfortable and unpopular to teach children about death and destruction; it is politically controversial; there is an ambivalence about U.S…. [PDF]

Totten, Samuel (1999). The Scourge of Genocide: Issues Facing Humanity Today and Tomorrow. Social Education, v63 n2 p116-21 Mar. Reveals the many barriers to ending genocide and introduces the different methods the United Nations intends to use as early-warning systems to stop genocide. Believes that when teaching about genocide, students must concentrate on (1) learning about unknown genocides and the Holocaust; and (2) remembering that the victims are people, not statistics. (CMK)…

Byrd, Jodi A. (2007). "Living My Native Life Deadly": Red Lake, Ward Churchill, and the Discourses of Competing Genocides. American Indian Quarterly, v31 n2 p310-332 Spr. In an attempt to understand how rival narratives of genocide compete even at the cost of disavowing other historical experiences, this article considers how the U.S. national media represented and framed Red Lake in the wake of Ward Churchill's emergence on the national radar. The first section of this article examines how nineteenth-century discourses of Manifest Destiny and stereotypes of noble and savage Indians informed media images and phrases that emerged to describe the events at Red Lake. The second section further contextualizes Red Lake and Minnesota within nineteenth-century historical events that epitomize the United States' genocidal policies enacted against African Americans and American Indians that resolve into Jim Crow, lynching, and the largest mass execution to occur within the United States. In the final section, the author discusses how Ward Churchill's controversial rhetoric and reactions to it and him are symptomatic of deeper U.S. anxieties about Indigenous… [Direct]

Totten, Samuel (1987). Genocide: A Primer for Students in Grades 8-12. Social Science Record, v24 n2 p8-14 Fall. Discusses genocide as an historical problem. Focusing on twentieth-century events such as the Holocaust and the Armenian and Cambodian genocides. Assesses the values of the United Nations Genocide Treaty. Calls for world vigilance to prevent future tragedies. (GEA)…

Astourian, Stephan (1990). The Armenian Genocide: An Interpretation. History Teacher, v23 n2 p111-60 Feb. Presents an interpretive study of the Armenian genocide of 1915 based on Israel Charny's societal-forces model. Argues genocides follow a pattern of long discriminatory relationships between a dominant and a dominated group. Cites the economic achievements of dominated groups as the basis. Shows the global pattern of genocide. (NL)…

Totten, Samuel (2001). Addressing the "Null Curriculum": Teaching about Genocides Other than the Holocaust. Social Education, v65 n5 p309-309 Sep. Describes the idea of the null curriculum in the context of teaching about genocide. Explores obstacles that prevent educators from teaching about genocides other than the Holocaust. Explains how teachers can begin teaching about other genocides in their classrooms. (CMK)…

Lankiewicz, Donald (1987). An American Genocide: A Unit. Social Science Record, v24 n2 p78-80 Fall. Presents methods for motivating, developing, and applying a lesson on genocide as it relates to the American Indian. Argues that according to the United Nations Genocide Convention, the U.S. government's actions toward the Indians constitute genocide. Includes a list of quotations pertinent to the subject which can be used as a student handout. (GEA)…

Kellow, Christine L.; Steeves, H. Leslie (1998). The Role of Radio in the Rwandan Genocide. Journal of Communication, v48 n3 p107-28 Sum. Examines and interprets the role of the government-controlled radio-television station in the 1994 Rwandan genocide. Considers historical and political contexts of the genocide and analyzes excerpts from radio broadcasts and observational accounts. Interprets, via several strands of communication, scholarship related to collective reaction effects and dependency theory, the role played by radio in inciting the genocide. (SR)…

Hovannisian, Richard G. (1987). The Armenian Genocide. Social Science Record, v24 n2 p18-22 Fall. Describes the "forgotten genocide" which entailed the systematic massacre of the Armenian people by the Turkish government. Compares the creation of special forces and use of "modern" technologies to carry out the process with events during the Holocaust. (GEA)…

15 | 1723 | 15784 | 25031222