Catherine MAIA
The latest issue of the International Review of the Red Cross (vol. 101, n°910, April 2019) is dedicated to "Memory and War".Vincent Bernard, Memory: a new humanitarian frontier
Interview with Boris Cyrulnik: Director of studies at the Université du Sud, Toulon-Var
Hélène Dumas, When children remember: A history of the Tutsi genocide through the eyes of children (1994–2006)
David Rieff, …And if there was also a duty to forget, how would we think about history then?
Marijn C. W. Kroes & Rain Liivoja, Eradicating war memories: Neuroscientific reality and ethical concerns
Jill Stockwell, Does individual and collective remembrance of past violence impede or foster reconciliation? From Argentina to Sri Lanka
Phuong N. Pham, Mychelle Balthazard, Niamh Gibbons, & Patrick Vinck, Perspectives on memory, forgiveness and reconciliation in Cambodia's post-Khmer Rouge society
Aaron Weah, Declining ethnic relations in post-war Liberia: The transmission of violent memories
Germán Parra Gallego, The role of freedom of expression in the construction of historical memory
Cédric Cotter, The role of experience and the place of history in the writings of ICRC presidents
Pierre Ryter, A personal experience in Turkey, Iran and China: The need for the ICRC to adapt in a multipolar world
Gilbert Holleufer, Heroic memory and contemporary war
Danielle Drozdzewski, Emma Waterton, & Shanti Sumartojo, Cultural memory and identity in the context of war: Experiential, place-based and political concerns
Helen Walasek, Cultural heritage and memory after ethnic cleansing in post-conflict Bosnia-Herzegovina
Annaïg Lefeuvre, The Shoah Memorial: A history retraced from the Drancy site
Annette Becker, Dark tourism: The “heritagization” of sites of suffering, with an emphasis on memorials of the genocide perpetrated against the Tutsi of Rwanda
Michael N. Schmitt, Wired warfare 3.0: Protecting the civilian population during cyber operations
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