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The League of Nations' efforts to rescue trafficked women, children

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  • The League of Nations' efforts to rescue trafficked women, children

    University of California at Santa Barbara

    Tuesday, November 3, 2009 @ 4 pm, McCune Room

    Keith David Watenpaugh, "The Paradox of Humanitarianism: The League of
    Nations' Efforts to Rescue Trafficked Women and Children in the Middle East,
    1920-1927"

    Drawn from Prof. Watenpaugh's forthcoming book, <<Bread from Stone: The
    Middle East and the Making of Modern Humanitarianism>> this talk examines
    the League of Nations' efforts on behalf of displaced Armenian, Greek, and
    Assyrian women and children in the early post-World War I period. It
    presents a case in which the rescuing of trafficked survivors of genocide
    and civil violence - a seemingly unambiguous good - was at once a
    constitutive act in drawing the boundaries of the international community,
    a critical moment in the definition of humanitarianism, and a site of
    resistance to the colonial presence in the post-Ottoman Eastern
    Mediterranean. These efforts helped to bind the international community to
    Armenian communal survival and served as an ex post facto warrant for the
    World War. They also threatened late-Ottoman ethnic, religious, and
    gendered hierarchies and the unalloyed dominance of post-Ottoman society
    by Turkish and Arabic-speaking Sunni Muslims.


    * Keith David Watenpaugh is Associate Professor of Modern Islam, Human
    Rights, and Peace at the University of California, Davis. He works on the
    multiple intersections of the modern international human rights regime,
    Islam, and colonialism in the 20th-century Arab Middle East. Trained at
    UCLA, Prof. Watenpaugh has lived and conducted research in Egypt, Syria,
    Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, and Iraq. He is the author of _Being Modern in
    the Middle East: Revolution, Nationalism, Colonialism, and the Arab Middle
    Class_ (Princeton University Press, 2006) and is now writing a book on
    international humanitarian efforts and the modern Middle East.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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