I’ve linked to this resource before. Part III deals specifically with museums and their potential to foster #HistoricalDialogue and prevent #MassAtrocities. https://www.routledge.com/Historical-Dialogue-and-the-Prevention-of-Mass-Atrocities/Barkan-Goschler-Waller/p/book/9781032336756
Historical Dialogue and the Prevention of Mass Atrocities

This book brings together a diverse range of international voices from academia, policymaking and civil society to address the failure to connect historical dialogue with atrocity prevention discourse and provide insight into how conflict histories and historical memory act as dynamic forces, actively facilitating or deterring current and future conflict. Established on a variety of international case studies combining theoretical and practical points of view, the book envisions an integrated un

Routledge & CRC Press

NETWORK CONFERENCE
Vienna, Austria
June 25-28, 2024

"Travels Beyond the Holocaust:
Memorialization, Musealization and Representation of Atrocities in Global Dialogue"

Deadline for abstracts: Dec. 1. CFP linked below.

#history #historicaldialogue #memory #justice #humanrights #museums #memorials #monuments #Holocaust #genocide

http://historicaldialogues.org/network-conference-2/

Network Conference – HISTORICAL JUSTICE AND MEMORY NETWORK

Google Scholar

@histodons

This is the new social media home of the Historical Dialogues, Justice, and Memory Network. Previously communicating through the bird site (@HistDialogue).

Welcome to fellow migrants! We hope you’ll like it here, and perhaps at some point we’ll say more about why we’ve made the change.

#HistoricalDialogue
#HistoricalJustice

This is the new social media home of the Historical Dialogues, Justice, and Memory Network. Previously communicating through the bird site (@HistDialogue).

Welcome to fellow migrants! We hope you’ll like it here, and perhaps at some point we’ll say more about why we’ve made the change.

#HistoricalDialogue #HistoricalJustice

Museums and Memorials as Sites of Dialogue: Historical Narratives, Mass Violence, and Atrocity Prevention

Chap. in Historical Dialogue and the Prevention of Mass Atrocities, Eds. Elazar Barkan, Constantin Goschler, and James Waller. Routledge, 2020. Abstract: Together with truth commissions, trials, and reparations, museums and memorials have emerged as

#Reparations in the news. Time Magazine has a cover story this week, "Slavery Reparations Are Coming," which starts with Barbados, but also reaches to cover California, England, and other global cases.

#historicaljustice #historicaldialogue

https://time.com/6290949/barbados-reparations/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=editorial&utm_term=world_&linkId=223536273

Inside Barbados' Historic Push for Slavery Reparations

The tiny island, alongside other Caribbean nations, is expected to request that 10 European countries begin negotiations for reparations.

Time

#HistoricalDialogue #HistoricalJustice

“The Sydney Morning Herald (SMH) admitted to spreading racist views and misinformation while campaigning for the killers to escape justice.”

Myall Creek: Newspaper makes historic apology for Aboriginal massacre reports - BBC News https://apple.news/Ay4ZzlrhETsGy4iBbeXDN4A

Myall Creek: Newspaper makes historic apology for Aboriginal massacre reports — BBC News

The Sydney Morning Herald says it spread racist views in a campaign for the killers' freedom in the 1830s.

"Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced."

— James Baldwin (1962)

#HistoricalDialogue #HistoricalJustice

Lots of podcasts out there. This looks like a great initiative, esp for anyone living in Upstate NY on traditional #Haudenosaunee #Iroquois lands. “The Land You’re On: Acknowledging the Haudenosaunee investigates the original story of our area, insights on Onondaga ways of life, policies that changed history, and aspects of the culture of the native people who originally called it home.” https://www.waer.org/podcast/the-land-youre-on #HistoricalDialogue
The Land You're On

The Land You’re On: Acknowledging the Haudenosaunee investigates the original story of our area, insights on Onondaga ways of life, policies that changed history, and aspects of the culture of the native people who originally called it home. This limited podcast series is based on interviews and conversations with Indigenous community members and allies, providing the context and perspective needed to understand the complicated history of the land we’re on. The 12 part series is a production of Access Audio, a storytelling initiative of the Special Collections Research Center at the Syracuse University Libraries.Produced by Brett Barry, Neal Powless, Bianca Caiella Breed, and Jim O'Connor.

WAER