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  • Yale Genocide Center: a hidden humanities gem

    The Yale Herald, CT
    Oct 5 2007


    Yale Genocide Center: a hidden humanities gem

    BY NICHOLAS KEMPER AND CAIO CAMARGO



    COURTESY PULITZERCENTER.ORG
    The GSP establishes missions in overseas countries in hopes of
    unearthing documents concerning genocide.

    t first glance, there's nothing exceptional about it - a modest office
    in the corner of Luce Hall. But when Benedict Kiernan, Whitney
    Griswold Professor of History, digs out the files - literally thousands
    of photocopied pages of Khmer propaganda, records, and diaries - the
    place suddenly comes to life. Many undergraduates may not even know
    it exists, but Yale's Genocide Studies Program is instrumental in the
    study and analysis of atrocities worldwide. In the case of the Khmer
    Rouge in Cambodia, Kiernan, the program's director, has made
    significant contributions to the field. `In 1996, our Cambodian
    mission discovered over 100,000 pages of secret police files,' said
    Kiernan. The files included lists of names produced during torture
    sessions with execution orders at the bottom signed by Pol Pot.

    According to Kiernan, the Yale Genocide Studies Program is a
    `research and policy oriented program' that documents the mass murder
    of civilians and tries to prevent recurrences. Affiliates of the
    project have produced ten books and 35 working papers since the
    Program's inception. Kiernan himself released a new book last Friday,
    Blood and Soil: A World History of Genocide and Extermination from
    Sparta to Darfur, which incorporated research done using the
    Program's funds.

    The organization was founded in 1994 as the `Center for Cambodian
    Genocide Studies,' but Professor Ben Kiernan expanded its mission and
    changed its name in 1998. The Program does not have any full time
    staff - in this way, it is a kind of extracurricular activity for
    faculty and graduate students - but it does count historians,
    sociologists, a professor of psychiatry, and `people from comparative
    literature, from English, from human rights programs, from genocide
    studies programs in the Northeast, [and] political science' amongst
    its members, said Kiernan. Beyond faculty, myriad graduate students
    from multiple Yale professional schools, Europe, and South America,
    whose research focuses on topics ranging from Native Americans to the
    Armenian Massacre, associate themselves with the project. The
    Genocide Studies Program also convenes in a weekly seminar in which a
    wide range of speakers comment on varied genocide-related topics.
    Interestingly, it is also affiliated with The Yale Institute for
    Biospheric Studies, Yale's principal environmental research
    organization, which is interested in correlations between genocide
    and the environment. In fact, no other Yale research institute has so
    global a list of affiliates.

    To Kiernan, genocide must be considered in both the short and long
    term. In the long term, it's a familiar list: war, poverty, political
    and economic destabilization. In the short term, the individual
    decisions and goals of political groups, as well as blind
    hatred - usually directed against an ethnic group - tend to unleash the
    pent-up forces of economic and societal deprivation. Kiernan firmly
    ruled out popularly-held beliefs about religious, political, or
    ideological tendencies as the roots of genocide: `Every movement has
    its bad apples.'

    Kiernan makes it clear that the Program's research has helped the
    academic community realize that no single policy will stop genocide.
    The prospective killers must be persuaded that the costs of their
    crimes outweigh the perceived benefits. Sometimes, such as in Rwanda
    and Kosovo, killers are beyond reason - a common ailment amongst the
    typical mass-murderer - and military force is necessary to put and end
    to the atrocities. However, Kiernan was careful to mention that such
    action should only be a last resort, for often military force can
    spawn more problems than it solves. For instance, American military
    intervention in Cambodia in the '60s is believed to have been
    instrumental in propelling the Khmer Rouge to power. The Khmer Rouge,
    of course, went on to kill somewhere between one and three million
    Cambodians. Thus, more focused and precise measures, such as economic
    sanctions, become a preferable alternative if there are signs that
    the perpetrators value money over life. Finally, prosecution through
    criminal proceedings `makes new information available and deters
    future perpetrators,' explains Kiernan.

    Despite the many political debates surrounding genocide today, the
    Program's fellows do not lobby or advocate specific policies in
    conjunction with their research. The Program approaches genocide as
    an historical, sociological, political, and scientific problem;
    policymaking implications are rarely considered. As for improving
    public knowledge about past atrocities not always understood as
    genocide, the GSP puts out myriad publications and has established
    missions in countries overseas with the goal of unearthing documents
    related to genocide. For instance, the GSP mission in Cambodia not
    only collected, translated, and published secret police documents,
    but was also set up in such a way that it now stands alone as an
    independent institution.

    Such fostering of permanent growth in genocide studies may be the
    Program's greatest contribution. According to Laura Saldivia, LAW
    '10, a Law School doctoral student who was once a fellow for the GSP,
    the Program has helped `to bring together a remarkable diversity of
    scholars that has helped to entrench the discussion within the
    scholarly community' about an issue that was, until the mid-1990s,
    practically ignored in academia. Such an accomplishment is, without
    doubt, rare in any field.

    At first glance, there's nothing exceptional about it - a modest office
    in the corner of Luce Hall. But when Benedict Kiernan, Whitney
    Griswold Professor of History, digs out the files - literally thousands
    of photocopied pages of Khmer propaganda, records, and diaries - the
    place suddenly comes to life. Many undergraduates may not even know
    it exists, but Yale's Genocide Studies Program is instrumental in the
    study and analysis of atrocities worldwide. In the case of the Khmer
    Rouge in Cambodia, Kiernan, the program's director, has made
    significant contributions to the field. `In 1996, our Cambodian
    mission discovered over 100,000 pages of secret police files,' said
    Kiernan. The files included lists of names produced during torture
    sessions with execution orders at the bottom signed by Pol Pot.

    According to Kiernan, the Yale Genocide Studies Program is a
    `research and policy oriented program' that documents the mass murder
    of civilians and tries to prevent recurrences. Affiliates of the
    project have produced ten books and 35 working papers since the
    Program's inception. Kiernan himself released a new book last Friday,
    Blood and Soil: A World History of Genocide and Extermination from
    Sparta to Darfur, which incorporated research done using the
    Program's funds.

    The organization was founded in 1994 as the `Center for Cambodian
    Genocide Studies,' but Professor Ben Kiernan expanded its mission and
    changed its name in 1998. The Program does not have any full time
    staff - in this way, it is a kind of extracurricular activity for
    faculty and graduate students - but it does count historians,
    sociologists, a professor of psychiatry, and `people from comparative
    literature, from English, from human rights programs, from genocide
    studies programs in the Northeast, [and] political science' amongst
    its members, said Kiernan. Beyond faculty, myriad graduate students
    from multiple Yale professional schools, Europe, and South America,
    whose research focuses on topics ranging from Native Americans to the
    Armenian Massacre, associate themselves with the project. The
    Genocide Studies Program also convenes in a weekly seminar in which a
    wide range of speakers comment on varied genocide-related topics.
    Interestingly, it is also affiliated with The Yale Institute for
    Biospheric Studies, Yale's principal environmental research
    organization, which is interested in correlations between genocide
    and the environment. In fact, no other Yale research institute has so
    global a list of affiliates.

    To Kiernan, genocide must be considered in both the short and long
    term. In the long term, it's a familiar list: war, poverty, political
    and economic destabilization. In the short term, the individual
    decisions and goals of political groups, as well as blind
    hatred - usually directed against an ethnic group - tend to unleash the
    pent-up forces of economic and societal deprivation. Kiernan firmly
    ruled out popularly-held beliefs about religious, political, or
    ideological tendencies as the roots of genocide: `Every movement has
    its bad apples.'

    Kiernan makes it clear that the Program's research has helped the
    academic community realize that no single policy will stop genocide.
    The prospective killers must be persuaded that the costs of their
    crimes outweigh the perceived benefits. Sometimes, such as in Rwanda
    and Kosovo, killers are beyond reason - a common ailment amongst the
    typical mass-murderer - and military force is necessary to put and end
    to the atrocities. However, Kiernan was careful to mention that such
    action should only be a last resort, for often military force can
    spawn more problems than it solves. For instance, American military
    intervention in Cambodia in the '60s is believed to have been
    instrumental in propelling the Khmer Rouge to power. The Khmer Rouge,
    of course, went on to kill somewhere between one and three million
    Cambodians. Thus, more focused and precise measures, such as economic
    sanctions, become a preferable alternative if there are signs that
    the perpetrators value money over life. Finally, prosecution through
    criminal proceedings `makes new information available and deters
    future perpetrators,' explains Kiernan.

    Despite the many political debates surrounding genocide today, the
    Program's fellows do not lobby or advocate specific policies in
    conjunction with their research. The Program approaches genocide as
    an historical, sociological, political, and scientific problem;
    policymaking implications are rarely considered. As for improving
    public knowledge about past atrocities not always understood as
    genocide, the GSP puts out myriad publications and has established
    missions in countries overseas with the goal of unearthing documents
    related to genocide. For instance, the GSP mission in Cambodia not
    only collected, translated, and published secret police documents,
    but was also set up in such a way that it now stands alone as an
    independent institution.

    Such fostering of permanent growth in genocide studies may be the
    Program's greatest contribution. According to Laura Saldivia, LAW
    '10, a Law School doctoral student who was once a fellow for the GSP,
    the Program has helped `to bring together a remarkable diversity of
    scholars that has helped to entrench the discussion within the
    scholarly community' about an issue that was, until the mid-1990s,
    practically ignored in academia. Such an accomplishment is, without
    doubt, rare in any field.

    http://www.yaleherald.com/article.php?Arti cle=5746
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