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war

Middle East Centre

The Limits of Refusal: Israel, Lebanon, and the Shadow of 1982

Lecture given by Dr Seth Anziska (Department of Hebrew and Jewish Studies, UCL) at the Middle East Centre, St Antony's College, 9th February 2016. This event was co-sponsored by the MEC and the School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies.
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars

Reparations for Human Rights and Humanitarian Violations: Taking Stock 10 years after the UN Basic Principles and Guidelines

Dr. Carla Ferstman (Director of REDRESS), gives a talk for the OTJR Seminar series on 3rd February 2016.
Oxford Transitional Justice Research Seminars

Primo Levi and the Nature of Guilt

Prof Alan Norrie, Professor at the School of Law, University of Warwick, gives a talk for the OTJR Seminar series on 25th November 2015.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

War and Ecology in China: Henan Province, the Yellow River and beyond

Dr Micah Muscolino discusses his new book entitled "The Ecology of War in China: Henan Province, the Yellow River, and Beyond, 1938–1950."
Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference

Heritage for Peace: an NGO protecting Syrian Cultural Heritage during the Conflict

Part of the Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference. Theme 3: What is being done or should be done? Exploring archaeological and military heritage protection initiatives. With Dr Emma Cunliffe (Heritage for Peace).
Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference

Law Enforcement of Cultural Heritage Crime

Part of the Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference. Theme 3: What is being done or should be done? Exploring archaeological and military heritage protection initiatives. With Vernon Rapley (Victoria and Albert Museum).
Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference

The Sites and Monuments Record for Syria, and the Shirin Project

Part of the Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference. Theme 3: What is being done or should be done? Exploring archaeological and military heritage protection initiatives. With Professor Graham Philip.
Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference

Politics with a focus on Yemen

Part of the Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference. Theme 2: Why is this happening? Understanding ISIL and other Islamist extremism. With Dr Noel Brehony (Chair of CBRL).
Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference

Cultural Heritage in the Islamic State’s Worldview

Part of the Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference. Theme 2: Why is this happening? Understanding ISIL and other Islamist extremism. With Dr Alia Brahimi (CCW; Contest Global).
Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference

Syriac Christian communities: people, monuments and manuscripts in Syria, Turkey, and Iraq

Part of the Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference. Theme 1: What is happening? The significance of sites at risk, and the current situation. with Dr Sebastian Brock and Sebastien de Courtois.
Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference

When words fail. Iraq's lost heritage, and efforts to save it

Part of the Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference. Theme 1: What is happening? The significance of sites at risk, and the current situation. Dr Lamia al-Gailani ( UCL/SOAS).
Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference

Monuments at War—the Syrian Conflict and the Changing Pattern of Destruction as Reflected in Aleppo and Palmyra

Part of the Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference. Theme 1: What is happening? The significance of sites at risk, and the current situation. With Dr Ross Burns.
Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference

Overview of Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East and North Africa

Part of the Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference. Theme 1: What is happening? The significance of sites at risk, and the current situation.
Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference

Welcome and introduction

Dr. Liz Carmichael (OxPeace) introduces the "Conflict and Cultural Heritage Conference", held in St John's College on Saturday 31 October 2015.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Too Valuable to Die?

Silke Ackermann, Nigel Biggar and Liz Bruton debate the ethics of science and scientists going to war
Dayton +20 (Forced Migration Review 50)

FMR 50 - From the Editors

An introductory note on FMR 50, 'Dayton + 20: twenty years on from the Dayton Agreement in the Balkans', from the Editors.
Dayton +20 (Forced Migration Review 50)

FMR 50 - Foreword: Addressing the legacy of violence

The aim of creating ethnically homogeneous statelets was curbed at Dayton but the dominance of ethnic politics was not.
Dayton +20 (Forced Migration Review 50)

FMR 50 - Annex 7: why are we still discussing it?

Annex 7 to the Dayton Peace Agreement was designed to address the displacement of 2.2 million people during the Bosnian war of 1992-95. Its job is not yet done.
Dayton +20 (Forced Migration Review 50)

FMR 50 - Political and social consequences of continuing displacement in Bosnia and Herzegovina

Twenty years after Dayton, failures to facilitate effective refugee and IDP return have had a social and political impact at both community and state level.
Dayton +20 (Forced Migration Review 50)

FMR 50 - Bosnia and Herzegovina 20 years on from Dayton

The coming two-and-a-half years represent what is possibly the last window of opportunity to accomplish what the Dayton Peace Agreement’s Annex 7 set out to achieve.

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