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Legacies
of Violence Research Circle |
"Captivity, Martyrdom,Terror - Performance & Politics" A sympusium sponsored by the Mellon Seminar in the Humanities, Center for Russia, East Europe and Central Asia (CREECA), and Legacies of Violence Research Circle (LOV); Supported by the Division of International Studies, the International Institute, and Global Studies. April 26 & 27, 2007- Ingraham Hall - 336/206 Thursday,
2.00-5.00 pm - Ingraham 336 6.00
pm - Ingraham Hall 206 Friday,
9.00-3.00pm - Ingraham 336
"Sexuality, Violence & Cultural Imagination"
A conference at UW-Madison by the Legacies of Violence Research Circle
March
23, 2007 This
conference engages with issues of violence and sexuality from historical
and non-western contexts, as well as the linkages between sex and violence
in current Western discourses about the past and others. Participants
Carol Siegel (Washington State) - Goth’s Dark Empire ; Peter Sigal
(Duke) - The Aztecs: Sexuality and the Ritualized Violence of the State
; Neil Whitehead (Wisconsin) - We Vampyrs - The Death of Ethnography
and the Resurrection of Desire ; Olga Romantsova (Kharkiv) - Gothic
Bodies In Ukraine ; Tomislav Longinovic (Wisconsin) - Imaginary Balkans:
A Sado-Masochist Cultural Economy ; Helene Sinnreich (Youngstown) -
Rape & The Holocaust; Christopher Butler (Wisconsin) - Criminal
Vampirism in 1990s North America ; Kata Beilin (Wisconsin) - Sex and
Politics; Discourses of Violence in Spanish Film ; Glen Close (Wisconsin)
- Rosario Tijeras - Femme Fatale in Thrall ; Erika Robb (Wisconsin)
- Tropical Travel Literature and Erotic Fantasy ; Zeb Tortorici (UCLA)
- Dominatrix, Experiences in the American Sex Trade. For flyer of the conference, click here.
"RESPONSES
TO ATROCITY" Friday, April 20 and Saturday, April 21, 2007 The conference explores the tradeoffs between international and domestic judicial responses to past atrocities, and includes a workshop on theory building in the literature on transitional justice. Sponsored by the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Legacies of Violence Research Circle, sponsored by the Division of International Studies, the International Institute and Global Studies. Conference
organizers: Friday, April 20, 2007 The
first day of the conference will focus on a specific issue in the
transitional justice field, the tensions, opportunities, and tradeoffs
between local and international judicial responses to large-scale
human rights violations. What are the advantages and disadvantages
of one judicial process over another? What is gained and lost between
international trials, hybrid trials, and domestic ones? Are international
and domestic trials in competition or do they complement each other?
Do certain political contexts favor one method over another? These
questions are ones that policy makers and political leaders often
face after large-scale violence, yet the questions have not been addressed
adequately in the literature. The conference will bring together both
scholars of particular countries as well as those who study judicial
responses from a global perspective.
Saturday, April 21, 2007
The
second day will be a workshop designed to bring together a number
of scholars working in the transitional justice field. Despite the
proliferation of transitional justice mechanisms, country cases,
and scholarship, the study of transitional justice remains under-theorized.
Much of the scholarly work is descriptive in nature or relies on
single-case or small-N studies. The absence of such studies has
meant that emerging democracies adopt the transitional justice mechanism
in vogue, or promoted by transnational advocates, rather than basing
their policies on careful research and empirically tested analysis.
The purpose of this workshop will be to provide feedback on individual
and group projects that explore theory-building in transitional
justice.
For past events, lick here.
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