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New Rutgers Course On Concentration Camps Examines Armenian Genocide

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  • New Rutgers Course On Concentration Camps Examines Armenian Genocide

    NEW RUTGERS COURSE ON CONCENTRATION CAMPS EXAMINES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    http://asbarez.com/119678/new-rutgers-course-on-concentration-camps-examines-armenian-genocide/
    Tuesday, February 18th, 2014

    Armenian Weekly editor and Ph.D. candidate Khatchig Mouradian will
    instruct the course at Rutgers University

    NEWARK, N.J.--A new course examining concentration camps used during
    five different wars is being offered at Rutgers University this
    spring. Armenian Weekly editor and Ph.D. candidate Khatchig Mouradian
    instructs the course, "Sociology and History of Concentration Camps"
    at the university's Newark, New Jersey campus.

    The course traces the evolution of the concentration camp from a
    counter-insurgency strategy in wartime to a weapon of mass murder.

    Cases being studied include the Spanish-Cuban war, the Second
    Anglo-Boer War, the Philippines-American War, the Armenian Genocide,
    and the Holocaust.

    "The course provides an overview of the history of the concentration
    camp as a means to control, suppress, and destroy populations," said
    Mouradian. "We look at the historical context, the decision-making
    process, and the interaction between central and local authorities,
    yet we focus on the agency of the victims and survival in the camps,
    with particular attention to power dynamics, race, gender, and class."

    The course and a series of lectures and events are being sponsored by
    the Armenian Genocide Program of the university's Center for the Study
    of Genocide and Human Rights (CGHR) in collaboration with The Genocide
    Education Project - Higher Education Division (GenEd-HigherEd).

    CGHR promotes research and scholarship on issues including genocide,
    conflict resolution, sustainability, justice, global health, and
    human rights. In the few years since its inception, CGHR has already
    sponsored numerous courses, lectures, conferences and cultural
    activities directed at its mission "to enhance our understanding
    of and find solutions to the most pressing 21st century challenges
    related to peace and conflict."

    CGHR has also hosted several programs through its Armenian Genocide
    Program. Mouradian has been the Program Coordinator since 2011 and also
    teaches a course in conflict resolution at Worcester State University
    as adjunct professor. His PhD dissertation at the Strassler Center
    for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University, examines the
    second phase of the Armenian Genocide.

    The Genocide Education Project is a nonprofit organization that
    assists educators in teaching about human rights and genocide,
    particularly the Armenian Genocide, by developing and distributing
    instructional materials, providing access to teaching resources and
    organizing educational workshops. It seeks to broaden the general
    understanding of the Armenian Genocide, in the context of the history
    of World War I and as a predecessor of the pattern of genocides that
    followed. GenEd-HigherEd is focused on facilitating courses and other
    programming at colleges and universities.

    James Sahagian, director of GenEd-HigherEd worked closely with
    the Rutgers CGHR to establish this course. "We are pleased to offer
    students a course that introduces key aspects of the Armenian Genocide
    in relation to other genocides and historical conflicts. We look
    forward to increasing our collaboration with CGHR in the future."

    Further information on this course and the Armenian Genocide Program
    at Rutgers can be obtained by calling (201) 739-0901 or by emailing
    [email protected].

    The Genocide Education Project is a nonpartisan, nonprofit,
    tax-exempt 501(c)(3) educational organization that assists educators
    in teaching about human rights and genocide, particularly the Armenian
    Genocide, by developing and distributing instructional materials,
    providing access to teaching resources and organizing educational
    workshops. For more information about The Genocide Education Project,
    go towww.GenocideEducation.org.

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