06/02/2018. Universidad del Barrio. 6th History Session: Poetics of resistance against oblivion and impunity

CONFERENCE:

Universidad del Barrio. “6th History Session: Poetics of resistance against oblivion and impunity”

February 06, 2018.

+ Information 

 

04/11/2018. Conference of Francisco Ferrándiz at Princeton University.

Conference “News from the Afterlife: Civil War Mass Grave Exhumations in Contemporary Spain” by Francisco Ferrándiz, at Princeton University. Wed, Apr 11, 2018, 4:30 pm.

https://anthropology.princeton.edu/events/news-afterlife-civil-war-mass-grave-exhumations-contemporary-spain

 

 

Poetics of Resistance against oblivion and impunity. Stories of mothers whose children were killed by the Colombian army.

SEMINAR UNIVERSIDAD DEL BARRIO – January 29 19:00

“Poetics of Resistance against oblivion and impunity. Stories of mothers whose children were killed by the Colombian army.”

 

 

Since 2002 in Colombia, more than 6,800 cases of extrajudicial executions have been reported, crimes against humanity that today, despite the rhetoric of peace, remain unpunished. Based on the experience and the story of four mothers, Maria Sanabria, Doris Tejada, Luz Marina Bernal and Lucero Carmona, whose children were disappeared and executed by the Colombian army in 2008, we will talk about how to narrate violence and pain, about the processes of resistance and struggle, and the consequences of the State that murdered its children being the one who intends to repair them. Reflections on cruelty, forgetfulness, impunity and justice.

Coordination. Laura Langa 

 

 

Dynamics: Two creative projects will be presented as resistance actions. Two experiences of teaching the irreparable, examples of how to transform sadness and pain. A transformative commitment to undertake research and the role that the academy can and should play in these processes.

(1)  Reading fragments of the book “Poetics of resistance against impunity and oblivion”. .. A publishing project in development, written by the mothers themselves.

+info

(2) The screening of the short film “Relatos de resistencia contra el olvido” (16 min Colombia 2016. ENTRELAZANDO) ENTRELAZANDO), a collective creation based on the dreams that these mothers had at the time of the murder of their children.

+info

 

 

 

Second Annual Conference of the Memory Studies Association. Copenhagen, 14-16 December 2017.

 

 

Second Annual Conference of the Memory Studies Association in Copenhagen, 14-16 December 2017.

https://www.memorystudiesassociation.org/copenhagen-conference-2017-program/

 

 

La petjada Ashkenazi a Barcelona (1929-1939)

Conference by: 

Manu Valentin
(Historian. Researcher and member of Mozaika)   
 
Wednesday, November 29, 2017
19:00 – 21:00 hours
Aula 303
Facultat de Geografia i Història (Universitat de Barcelona)
C/ Montalegre, 6
Metro Universitat – Catalunya – Liceu

Free entry
How to get?

For more information: Facebook of Rastres i Rostres

Guardar

Women in the Civil War and the Postwar Period. Memory and Education. 24 / XI / 2017

 

II Conference on cultural Heritage, Memory and Archeology 

Assembly Hall in the Casa de Socorro of the City Council of Alcalá de Henares (Street Santiago, 13) 28801 Alcalá de Henares

November 24 from 10.00 am to 8.00 pm

Organized by:

AMTTA, MCyP and AUDEMA and the collaboration of the Hon. City Council of Alcalá de Henares

In its second edition, these conferences, reflects our concern about the “invisibility” of women in the Spanish civil war and post-war, in a double aspect, that of Memory and Education.
It is intended to rescue (once again) aspects of the silenced memory. And so we went from the Landscapes of the Civil War and the Postwar as threatened spaces to give voice to a story that has been stolen and erased. We will speak of generators and transmitters of memory that have been subjected to amnesia and forgetfulness.
Admission is free upon registration at: ecoig@audema.com

file:///C:/Users/53494571K/Downloads/24nov_mujeres_guerra_civil_y_posguerra_ah.pdf

Representing Evidence

Conference (in English) by:  
Shelley Hornstein

(Professor of Architectural History and Visual Culture, York University, Toronto)

Thursday, November 23, 2017
12:00 – 14:00 hours
Sala María Moliner (1F8)
Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales, CSIC
C/Albasanz, 26-28
Metro Suanzes & Ciudad Lineal

Free entry

 

Guardar

Forensic Truth Polish Debates about the Exhumation in Jedwabne

Conference by: 

Ewa Domanska
(Universidad de Adam Mickiewicz, Poznan / Stanford University)

 
Thursday, November 16, 2017
12:00 – 14:00 hours
Sala María Moliner (1F8)
Centro de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales, CSIC
C/Albasanz, 26-28
Metro Suanzes & Ciudad Lineal

Free entry

 

Guardar

6th Global Conference on Genocide

 

6th Global Conference on Genocide
CALL FOR PAPERS
Medical Faculty of Aix-Marseille University (France), 4-7 July 2018


Genocide and Mass Violence : diagnosis, treatment, and recovery ?
Humanities, social and medical sciences facing extreme violence

Conference Steering Committee
Dr. Elisabeth Anstett, CNRS, Chair of the Committee
Mme Laetitia Delouis, CNRS-AMU, Coordinator of the Committee
Mr Valery Ravix, AMU, IT manager

Conference Scientific Committee
Prof. Pascal Adalian, forensic anthropologist, AMU (France)
Dr. Pamela Colombo, sociologist, EHESS (France)
Prof. Jean-Marc Dreyfus, historian, the University of Manchester (UK)
Dr. Francisco Ferrandiz, social anthropologist, CSIC (Spain)
Prof. Caroline Fournet, legal scholar, University of Groningen (Netherlands)
Prof. Sévane Garibian, legal scholar, University of Geneva (Switzerland)
Dr. Gabriel Gatti, sociologist, University of Basque Country (Spain)
Dr. Anne Guillou, social anthropologist, CNRS (France)
Prof. Mario Ranaletti, historian, Universidad Nacional Tres de Febrero (Argentina)
Nicky Rousseau, historian, University of Western Cape (RSA)
Dr. Michel Signoli, archaeologist, CNRS (France)

Context
The International Network of Genocide Scholars (INoGS) was founded in January 2005 in Berlin to provide genocide studies with a non-partisan forum through which to present research and analysis on any aspect of genocide as well as other forms of collective violence. Because genocide is a highly contested legal, historical, sociological and political concept, INoGS has, since its founding, maintained support of research-led analysis rather than politically-defined agendas.
The series of Global Conferences organized by INoGS since 2009 in Sheffield, Brighton, San Francisco, Cape Town and Jerusalem, have witnessed intensified scholarly engagement with a range of issues of fundamental importance to the field of genocide studies, including theoretical and methodological approaches to the subject, the legal and ethical bases upon which to approach episodes of extreme violence, as well as the need to develop more effective means of stopping and preventing mass violence globally.

Conference aims
For more than 70 years, following the seminal analysis developed by legal scholar Raphael Lemkin, academics, practitioners, and researchers from a variety of disciplines have addressed the issue of genocide and mass violence using a wide range of empirical and theoretical approaches to explore case studies throughout history. Interdisciplinary research across the humanities, legal and social sciences, as well as comparative approaches, have thus characterized genocide studies.
However, even if extreme violence is relevant to various medical fields such as psychology, psychiatry and forensic anthropology, dialogue with the humanities and social sciences has been slow to develop. The 6th Global Conference of INoGS, to be held at the Medical Faculty of Aix-Marseille University (France) on 4-7 July 2018, therefore seeks to open new avenues for research on extreme violence while stimulating interdisciplinary exchanges between the humanities, social and medical sciences. The early detection and prevention of mass violence represents a global challenge for each and every one of these fields of knowledge.
This conference will thus seek to discuss various examples of past and contemporary mass crimes, delve into the causes as well as the short and long-term effects of genocidal processes, and foster dialogue between stakeholders who rarely exchange views.

Conference topics
The organizers invite proposals for papers, panels and roundtables on any aspect of genocide and mass crime. We are especially keen to receive proposals from Latin America, Asia and Africa. Scholars working on topics such as sexual violence, forced disappearances, torture, mass trauma, forced separation of children from their families, conflict resolution, and mediation initiatives are particularly encouraged to submit abstracts. Presentations on recent experiences of mass violence, such as those in Syria, Darfur, Iraq, Mexico, Colombia, and Myanmar are expressly welcome. We encourage the submission of papers and panels on issues regarding violence contamination and containment processes. Another theme of particular interest is that of humanitarian intervention and the ethical challenges it poses.

Other topics of interest include but are not restricted to :

Symptoms and diagnoseis
Individual cases or comparative analyses of genocide and mass violence
Colonialism and mass crime
Prevention of collective violence
Gendered violence, abduction and forced transfer of children from their families Mass trauma : voices of victims 
Roles of perpetrators, bystanders and victims
Forensic architecture, satellite imagery and tools for detecting mass murder
Mass death and migration
Refugee camps

Treatment
International law, criminal tribunals, and the International Criminal Court
Humanitarian and military interventions
Transitional justice 
Mass exhumations and identification of victims
DNA banks

Recovery

The repercussions of mass violence in both the short and long term
The politics of apology, reconciliation and restitution
Genocide denial, justifications and silences
Memorialization and commemoration of atrocities
Genocide, mass violence and the internet
Representations of genocide in literature, film, art, music and other media
Academic and educational practice within the field of genocide studies

Submission procedure

Participation is not restricted to INoGS members. We welcome interdisciplinary and theoretically-informed approaches as well as trans-disciplinary dialogue. Submissions from scholars, postgraduate students, as well as practitioners and researchers working in government, the NGO sector and other institutions are invited.
From mid October 2017, prospective participants will be able to upload proposals in the form of abstracts of no more than 250 words via the conference website at http://inogsconference2018.com . A biographical sketch of no more than 100 words will also be required. Panel and roundtable submissions need, in addition, to explain the rationale behind the suggestion. Queries relating to this process can be sent to admin@inogsconference2018.com . Applicants can expect to learn the outcome of their proposals within four weeks of submission. After their proposals have been accepted participants will need to register online at http://inogsconference2018.com/ which contains further information about the conference, fees, accommodation options, travel advice, and other relevant matters. Participants registering before 15th February will receive a 10% discount for early registration.

The closing date for paper, panel and roundtable submissions is 15th March 2018.

Funding Opportunities
INoGS is pleased to announce that funding is available to subsidize the attendance of scholars and PhD students from the Global South and from countries experiencing major financial difficulties. The number of grants available is limited. 
Prospective presenters from the Global South and from countries experiencing major financial difficulties are thus invited to apply for support to attend the conference under the conference website’s “SCHOLARSHIPS” tab, after their paper or panel proposal has been accepted. The closing date for applications is 28th February 2018 and awards will be announced before the end of March 2018. Please refer to the conference website for details.

 

http://www.inogsconference2018.com/spip.php?rubrique17

 

Postgraduate course: “Social Memory and Human Rights: Social and Forensic Sciences in the face of contemporary conflicts”

 

UNED 2017/2018

Postgraduate and Professional Development Program with Modular Structure.
“Social Memory and Human Rights: Social and Forensic Sciences in the face of contemporary conflicts”.

Objetives:

The objective of this program is to offer its graduates the essential tools and concepts to understand and analyze in depth the memory and human rights management processes in postconflict situations so that, from their respective professional fields, they can contribute to create informed opinion and / or design public policies with adequate and solid theoretical and practical background.

 

http://formacionpermanente.uned.es/tp_actividad/idactividad/9528