Published on March 25, 2021
From the Co-Directors
Last month we reflected on our responsibility to actively, not passively, bear witness to the increasingly brazen violence on the part of the Tatmadaw in Myanmar, and to put pressure on governmental and civil society actors to protect protesters. And this month we cannot help but add our voice to those who are calling for more action to accompany the U.S. State Department鈥檚 acknowledgement of the genocide being perpetrated by China against the Uyghurs in Xinjiang Province. Elsewhere in this newsletter, Max provides a brief summary of an unprecedented independent report issued earlier this month. The report, advised by over fifty international experts in international law and Chinese politics, concludes that the Chinese government鈥檚 policies in Xinjiang violate every provision of the Genocide Convention.
Responding to the genocides in Myanmar and China will require unwavering commitments on the part of atrocity prevention actors as well as creative thinking that extends outside the realm of usual policy strategies. For that, we may need to enlist the help of some actors who are not usually at the table. While we don鈥檛 purport to have the answers, we are encouraged by conversations taking place among the Binghamton University faculty participating in the Charles E. Scheidt Faculty Fellows in Atrocity Prevention program this year. Reminiscent of what Frans Johansson documented in his 2004 book The Medici Effect, the most innovative and revolutionary ideas can arise from the most unusual pairings of disciplines and perspectives. The conversations among the Scheidt Faculty Fellows are still in early stages, but we already see potential for innovative approaches to atrocity prevention in the discussions between experts in linguistics and operations management, between experts in big data analysis and native American studies, between experts in supply chain management and Indian history, between experts in healthcare and strategic leadership, and between experts in quality assurance and secondary school English. In future newsletters, we will profile some of the participants and share the ideas that they are generating.
This month we call your attention to a series of upcoming events, including a week of virtual visits from people living with loss and working for reconciliation amidst the ongoing Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and two webinars: one examining the role of women of color as atrocity prevention leaders, and the other engaging experts from Brazil examining ongoing atrocities committed against Indigenous peoples. In keeping with our past webinars, these will be in the form of conversations with and among the experts, and will have designated time to include your questions. Please join us for as many of the events as your schedule allows.
- Nadia Rubaii & Max Pensky
New Independent Report Documents Ongoing Genocide in Xinjiang
I-GMAP Co-Director Max Pensky was one of over 50 international experts to contribute to a new report documenting China's genocidal policies against the Uighur minority in Xinjiang Province.
The report, by the independent Newlines Institute for Strategy and Policy, collected extensive witness testimony, both public and leaked Chinese state communication, and open-source research including satellite image analysis, and asked for expert opinions on whether China's treatment of its Uighur minority constituted breaches to the 1948 United Nations Genocide Convention. The report concludes that China is in violation of all five acts prohibited under the Convention: killing members of a protected group, causing them serious bodily or mental harm, deliberately inflicting on them conditions calculated to bring about their physical destruction in whole or in part, imposing measures intended to prevent births, and forcibly transferring children. These acts are being committed with the specific intent to bring about the destruction of the group as such.
The report is the first comprehensive independent study documenting China's breaches of the Convention. Its release this month comes shortly after the US State Department determined China's actions in Xinjiang Province constituted genocide. The full report, entitled "The Uighur Genocide: An Examination of China's Breaches of the 1948 Genocide Convention," is .
Essentials of Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention Students Take Part in Atrocity Response Simulation
Students in I-GMAP's course "Essentials of Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention" teamed up with students from the Arizona State University School of Law for this semester's Atrocity Response Simulation. The highly realistic simulation groups students into teams, each representing a global atrocity response actor, and challenges them to formulate and assess policies in real time in response to cascading information as a hypothetical scenario of imminent atrocity develops somewhere in the world.
The simulation, designed by long-time civil servant James Finkel, takes place in multiple rounds of play over a weekend. Previous simulations at Binghamton have included one set in Haiti (2018) and Sri Lanka (2020), which I-GMAP co-hosted with the United States Military Academy at West Point. For this Spring's event, set in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Binghamton and ASU students were joined by students from Dartmouth College, Yale University, the University of Wisconsin at Madison, and SUNY Brockport. This Spring's team of expert advisors were a distinguished group of recently retired US foreign service officers, including the former US Ambassadors to Serbia, Montenegro, Estonia, Timor Leste, Burundi, and Botswana.
Gender Mainstreaming
Mechanisms of Atrocity Prevention Policy Brief
As we announced last year, we have been working on building the foundation for our Mechanisms of Atrocity Prevention Project. This is part of the Institute's mission to bridge the gap between academics and practitioners by utilizing dynamic research teams to publish policy-focused atrocity prevention reports. We are excited to release our first report of the series, a policy brief entitled, "Gender Mainstreaming."
The purpose of this brief is to provide recommendations on how to approach the possibilities of gender mainstreaming when gender identities are nonbinary. This brief also gives an overview of gender mainstreaming issues when it comes to downstream phases of atrocity prevention in places that have recently recovered from civil wars鈥攖he same civil wars which systematically committed violence against women and nonbinary genders.
Upcoming Events
50th Anniversary Event of Bangladesh Genocide Features Binghamton Doctoral Candidate
The Center for the Study of Genocide and Justice, Liberation War Museum of Bangladesh is going to commemorate Bangladesh Genocide Day on March 25, 2021.
The Center for the Study of Genocide and Justice is organizing a round-table discussion, "50 Years on, Recognition of Bangladesh Genocide," on Thursday, March 25 from 10:00-11:00 AM BST (12 midnight - 1am EDT). The roundtable discussion explores issues of memorialization and commemoration of the genocide across generations, international recognition of the Bangladesh genocide, and the historiography of the 1971 war. The event shall be organized in the Bengali language.
The discussion will include our very own 黑料视频 doctoral candidate, Shahriar Islam. He is working on a PhD in Community and Public Affairs. His research investigates intergenerational memory of the 1971 genocide as passed on through textbooks, novels, movies and family narratives, and the connection with perceptions of trustworthiness of governance institutions in Bangladesh.
Join I-GMAP for a week of Stories of Loss and Reconciliation from the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
March 29 鈥 April 2, 2021
Experience the power of parallel narratives as a tool for understanding the 鈥渙ther.鈥 Join us for one or more of the scheduled events to better understand the value of dialogue, tolerance, reconciliation and peace not only within the Israeli-Palestinian context, but also as it relates to racial conflict within the United States and effective atrocity prevention generally.
Israeli Palestinian Bereaved Families For Peace and The Institute for Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention (I-GMAP) proudly present a week of visiting practitioners from the . PCFF is a joint Israeli-Palestinian nonprofit organization of over 600 families, all of whom have lost an immediate family member to the ongoing conflict. The work of PCFF is grounded in an understanding that the process of reconciliation between nations is a prerequisite to achieving a sustainable peace.
All events are free and open to the university community and broader public via Zoom.
THE FULL SCHEDULE and online registration form
Women of Color Leaders in Atrocity Prevention
Friday, April 9 from 2:00 - 3:30pm (EDT)
Join us as we celebrate the work of women of color in atrocity prevention and their visions for transformation. We will be joined by Francia Marquez, an internationally recognized Afro-Colombian environmental and racial justice leader and Miranda Sheffield, a community scholar and organizer from Pomona, California deeply rooted in Black feminist school of thought. They will share with us their justice work rooted in ancestral knowledge, community and electoral politics, and their strategies and vision for atrocity prevention both locally and transnationally.
The Panelists:
Francia Marquez is a grassroots activist internationally recognized for her work on environmental and racial justice. The winner of the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize in 2018, and a formidable leader of the Afro-Colombian community, Francia M谩rquez organized the women of La Toma and stopped illegal gold mining on their ancestral land. She exerted steady pressure on the Colombian government and spearheaded a 10-day, 350-mile march of 80 women to the nation鈥檚 capital, resulting in the removal of all illegal miners and equipment from her community. Marquez recently announced that she will be running for president of Colombia.
Miranda Sheffield is a mother, community scholar, and a community organizer. Her principles and practices are deeply rooted in Black feminist school of thought. She is active in the community as a member of Police Oversight Starts Today (POST) and Pomona United for Stabilized Housing (PUSH). Sheffield obtained her BA in Sociology from Cal State LA and a Master鈥檚 in Human Rights Law from SOAS University in London, in which she explored the historical legacy of maroons/fugitive slaves. Her community safety record includes her work as a case manager for Commercially Sexually Exploited Children (CSEC) and drafting a Federal policy briefing for more evidence-based mentorship programs for foster youth while working in Nancy Pelosi鈥檚 office. Most recently she ran for Pomona District 6 City Council under "the peoples candidate" platform.
Moderated by:
Jenny Escobar, PhD, Charles E. Scheidt postdoctoral fellow in Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention
Nadia Rubaii, PhD, co-director, I-GMAP, professor, Public Administration
Risks and Realities of Mass Atrocities facing Brazil鈥檚 Indigenous Peoples
Hosted in collaboration with the Cardozo Law Institute in Holocaust and Human Rights
Friday, April 16, 2021
10:00 AM 鈥 12:00 PM (EDT)
In many parts of the world, particularly throughout the Americas, indigenous peoples have been and continue to be victims of targeted mass atrocity violence. The violence is not limited to colonial era genocides, forced displacements, religious conversions or so-called re-education programs. It has continued in the form of destruction and contamination of lands and waters in the name of economic development, as well as killings and disappearances of indigenous rights defenders.
Most recently it has manifested in disproportionate infection and death rates as part of the global COVID-19 pandemic. Nowhere is the persistent attack on indigenous rights and the need for more effective atrocity prevention work more apparent than in Brazil.
Join us in a conversation with four leading atrocity prevention actors from different spheres of Brazilian society who are working to protect indigenous peoples. This event is intentionally scheduled to occur just before the start of the 2021 United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.
Simultaneous Interpretation:
English - Portuguese - Spanish
The Panelists:
T贸nico Benites (Guarani-Kaiow谩) is an indigenous rights leader, anthropologist and human rights defender from Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil. He has developed extensive research and mapping exposing the patterns of attack perpetrated against indigenous communities in Brazil. He is a leading spokesman for the Guarani and Kaiow谩 peoples, and serves as a translator, consultant and expert in federal lawsuits. He holds a Masters and PhD in Social Anthropology; his post-doctoral research project involved coordination of 鈥淎 dialogue between the memory of indigenous peoples and the national historical heritage.鈥
M谩rcia Wayna Kambeba (Om谩gua / Kambeba) is a poet, writer, composer, photographer, activist and international speaker on indigenous and environmental issues, and the first indigenous Ombudswoman in Belem do Para, Brazil. She is the author of 4 books of poems about the Amazon and indigenous and environmental issues. She is a trained Geographer with a master's degree in Cultural Geography and a Specialization in Environmental Education.
Fernanda Bragato is a Full Professor of Law at Unisinos Law School (Brazil). Her research is at the intersection of human rights theory, decolonial thinking, and indigenous rights, with an emphasis on indigenous land rights and conflicts in Brazil in the context of risk for atrocities. She holds a Master and PhD in Law, and has held positions as visiting scholar at Birkbeck College (University of London) and Fulbright Visiting Scholar at Cardozo Law School.
J煤lio Jos茅 Ara煤jo, Jr. is a former federal judge and current federal prosecutor at in the State of Rio de Janeiro. He is Coordinator of the working group on Prevention of Atrocities against Indigenous Peoples in the Public Prosecutor鈥檚 Office and the working group on Traditional Peoples and Communities within the National Council of the Public Ministry. He is a PhD student in Public Law at Rio de Janeiro State University and author of "Indigenous land rights: an intercultural interpretation.鈥
Moderated by:
- Nadia Rubaii, co-director of the Institute for Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention (I-GMAP), 黑料视频
- Jocelyn Getgen Kestenbaum, director of the Benjamin B. Ferencz Human Rights and Atrocity Prevention Clinic at Cardozo Law
Recent News
Charles E. Scheidt Postdoctoral Fellow Dr. DeAngelo Receives Prestigious Wilson China Fellowship
The Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Asia Program, in conjunction with the Kissinger Institute on China and the United States awarded our Dr. Darcie DeAngelo, a Charles E. Scheidt Postdoctoral Fellow in Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention, the Wilson China Fellowship for 2021-2022.
The fellowship seeks policy-oriented academics with specialization in political, social, economic, security, or historical issues related to China. The fellows work for the year to produce research that improves understanding of the role that China is playing in the Indo-Pacific, its relations with its neighbors and the United States, and its impact on peace and security issues. Additionally, the Fellowship seeks to build bridges between traditional academia and the policy world, and to support a new generation of American scholarship on China.
Darcie's winning proposal, "Minefield Migrations: Entangled perceptions of China, the US, and regulations in the Greater Mekong Subregion," seeks to answer the following questions:
- what are the changing discourses and narratives that correlate to US development projects and Chinese development projects, specifically in the Greater Mekong Subregion?
- and how can we evaluate the ecological and forced migration effects of Chinese-funded development projects in Southeast Asia?
The United States is rapidly losing ground to China in developing countries like the Greater Mekong Subregion. China鈥檚 reach through the Belt and Road Initiative has made new headways in both states and among the people. These changing discourses and narratives surrounding Western and Chinese development in the Subregion affect not only US diplomatic relations with the Asia-Pacific but also exacerbates issues with a more global reach like climate change. For instance, in Cambodia, Chinese-funded land development pushes out local inhabitants by further destroying ecological niches in Cambodia, forcing Cambodians to seek work in factories and service work in other countries like Thailand, Vietnam, and Malaysia.
This project proposes to explore a case study of local Chinese land development projects in the Greater Mekong Subregion, the subsequent narratives and discourses surrounding Chinese and US development, and the socio-ecological effects of Chinese-funded development projects. In Cambodia, for example, villagers become climate change refugees whose farmland lies fallow by drought provoked by both exacerbated climate change and projects like Chinese land development. At the same time, these development projects fund infrastructure and local economic growth, incentivizing increased relations with China on the ground, leading to changing discourse among other key stakeholders in the state.
We are very excited about Darcie's accomplishment and wish her the best on her scholarly journey.
A Conversation with Alice Wairimu Nderitu, the new UN Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide
March 17, 2021, Alice Wairimu Nderitu, the newly appointed United Nations Special
Adviser to the Secretary-General on the Prevention of Genocide, joined us for a conversation
about her long career in atrocity prevention and her vision for the Office of the
Special Adviser during her mandate.
During the webinar, Nderitu shared the story of her path to becoming Special Adviser, including her decades of work in her native Kenya, along with a number of other African countries, including Zambia and Nigeria. She spoke of her experience of living through the 2007-2008 electoral violence in Kenya, as well as her participation in the successful efforts to prevent the recurrence of that violence in 2013. Nderitu shared an array of goals she has for her own mandate as Special Adviser. In addition to continuing the work of previous administrations, she hopes to expand the office鈥檚 focus on engaging with community efforts to prevent identity-based violence at the local level. Offering several practical examples from her own experience, she proved that the world, and in particular the Global North, has a great deal to learn from sub-Saharan Africa and the efforts made at all levels to build resiliency and prevent large-scale violence.
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