[lbo-talk] Western states have created the biggest wars in history ( was fartback)

Michael Pugliese michael.098762001 at gmail.com
Wed Jul 20 16:30:17 PDT 2005


What will stop these State Dept. Western Imperialists at Yale's Genocide studies program? http://www.yale.edu/gsp/current/index.html Fall 2005 Genocide Studies Program Seminars Thursdays 1.30-3.20 p.m., ISPS conference room, 77 Prospect St., New Haven

September 29

Prof. Alfred A. Cave, University of Toledo The 1637 Pequot War and the Question of Native American Genocide (co-sponsored by the Lamar Center for the Study of Frontiers and Borders) October 6 Casper Erichsen, Independent Scholar, Namibia A People Without Space: Concentration Camps, Genocide and Denial in German South West Africa, 1904-08

October 20 Prof. Andrea Bartoli, Genocide Prevention Program, Columbia University Preventing Genocides of Indigenous Peoples Commentator: Elizabeth Levy Paluck, Psychology, Yale Rwanda's Batwa Minority, in the Genocide and After October 27 Benjamin Madley, History, Yale Genocide of the Yuki and Tolowa in Nineteenth-Century California Commentator: Dr. Charles Smal, co-editor, Globalization and Marginality (Co-sponsored by the Lamar Center for the Study of Frontiers and Borders) November 3 Dr. Eric Markusen, Department of Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Danish Institute for International Studies The Darfur Genocide Investigations: Motives, Methods, and Implications November 10 Prof. Katherine McCaffrey, Anthropology, Montclair State University Native Americans in Latin America: Contexts for Genocide Commentator: Prof. Stuart Schwartz, co-editor, The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas, vol. III, South America November 17 Prof. Jeffrey Ostler, Head, Department of History, University of Oregon The Question of Genocide in U.S. History, 1783-1890 Commentator: Prof. John Mack Faragher, author of A Great and Noble Scheme (co-sponsored by the Lamar Center for the Study of Frontiers and Borders)



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