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Call for Papers

Theme: Historical Justice and Memory
Subtitle: Questions of Rights and Accountability in Contemporary
Society
Type: 2nd Annual AHDA Conference
Institution: Alliance for Historical Dialogue and Accountability
(AHDA)
   Institute for the Study of Human Rights, Columbia University
Location: New York, NY (USA)
Date: 5.–7.12.2013
Deadline: 5.9.2013

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AHDA’s (The Alliance for Historical Dialogue and Accountability)
Dialogues on Historical Justice and Memory Network, at Columbia
University’s Institute for the Study of Human Rights, will hold its
second annual conference in New York City, December 5-7, 2013.

Historical dialogue and accountability is a growing field of advocacy
and scholarship that encompasses the efforts in conflict,
post-conflict, and post-dictatorial societies to come to terms with
their pasts. In contesting nationalist myths and identities, in
examining official historical narratives, and opening them to
competing narratives about past violence, historical dialogue seeks
to provide analysis of past violence grounded in empirical research;
acknowledge the victims of past violence and human rights abuses;
challenge and deconstruct national, religious, or ethnic memories of
heroism and/or victimhood; foster shared work between interlocutors
of two or more sides of a conflict; identify and monitor how history
is misused to divide society and perpetuate conflict; enhance public
discussion about the past.

This conference seeks to consider questions relating to these topics,
with primary consideration given to the following themes: sharing
sacred spaces; perpetrators as victims; and historical dialogue as
part of conflict resolution.

- Sharing Sacred Spaces:

Shared sacred spaces, as sites that are significant to more than one
religion or ethnic group, can be a source of collaboration or
conflict, or somewhere in between, with many possible factors that
push in either direction. We are interested in delineating what the
particular arrangements of sharing sacred spaces are in the
contemporary world and how these forms of sharing are connected to
the past. What are the ways in which different religions have come to
share a particular site, and has that changed over time? Within these
different forms of sharing we also want to explore the factors that
lead to conflict or cooperation. With knowledge of these factors,
what tools can be developed to address conflict and its causal
factors, and what tools can be developed to facilitate greater
cooperation and collaboration? Other questions, such as the
relationship between sacred spaces and identity, and the use of
historical dialogue tools to promote tolerance and respect for a
variety of narratives and beliefs are also welcome.

- Perpetrators as Victims:

While there is generally great deal of sympathy for victims, the fact
remains that not all victims are equal, and not all victimizations
are straight-forward. There are many instances of perpetrators in
mass violence and war, who in conflict- or post-conflict situations
claim the status of victims. Thus their responsibility and guilt is
reframed and denied. What is the background of this phenomenon? How
does it reflect ideas of collective guilt or the politicization of
historical discourse, or does it? What are the dynamics at play in
this process, and what are specific case studies in which we can
examine them? Papers that explore case studies, the culture of
victimization, the ways in which national courts or international
tribunals have contributed to the phenomena, and how this phenomenon
itself has influenced policies that address coming to terms with the
past (among others), are welcome.

- Historical dialogue as conflict resolution:

In recent years, societies have begun to pay greater attention to
violence and crimes in their histories when moving from an
authoritarian state to a democracy, or emerging from a violent
conflict like civil war. There are yet other societies that have
begun to use historical dialogue to address injustices of the distant
past, sometimes even centuries ago. In fact, a society with
heightened awareness of its violent historical legacy often has a
stronger civic democratic identity and is less prone to propaganda
that might cause a new cycle of violence, and in this sense we can
think of historical dialogue as part of the larger work of conflict
resolution. Nonetheless, the process of historical dialogue as a tool
in conflict resolution also faces numerous challenges, and these
processes are the focus this conference theme: the divide between
theory and practice, between the academy and the practitioner;
forging alliances between different groups within the society;
questions of a shared language and broader access to resources are
only a few topics that consider the broader question about the
relationship between historical dialogue and conflict resolution.

Please e-mail a 300-500 word abstract and a 2-3 sentence bio as well
as contact information to <a...@columbia.edu> no later than September
5, 2013. The abstract and bio should be sent as a single e-mail
attachment. Applications for panels or roundtables are also welcome.
Partial funding may be available for participants.


Contact:

Ariella Lang
Alliance for Historical Dialogue and Accountability
Institute for the Study of Human Rights
Columbia University
Riverside Church Tower, 7th floor
91 Claremont Ave (between W. 120 St. and W. 122 St)
New York, NY 10027
USA
Email: a...@columbia.edu
Web: http://hrcolumbia.org/ahda/conference/




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