1st Edition
Interrogating the Perpetrator Violation, Culpability, and Human Rights
1. Interrogating the perpetrator: violation, culpability and human rights
Cathy J. Schlund-Vials and Samuel Martínez
2. ‘Victim/volunteer’: heroes versus perpetrators and the weight of US service-members’ pasts in Iraq and Afghanistan
Jean Scandlyn and Sarah Hautzinger
3. War propaganda, war crimes, and post-conflict justice in Serbia: an ethnographic account
Jordan Kiper
4. Refiguring the perpetrator: culpability, history and international criminal law’s impunity gap
Kamari Maxine Clarke
5. False promise and new hope: dead perpetrators, imagined documents and emergent archival evidence
Michelle Caswell and Anne Gilliland
6. The space of sorrow: a historic video dialogue between survivors and perpetrators of the Cambodian killing fields
Susan Needham, Karen Quintiliani and Robert Lemkin
7. Perpetrating ourselves: reading human rights and responsibility otherwise
Crystal Parikh
8. Victims, perpetrators, and the limits of human rights discourse in post-Palermo fiction about sex trafficking
Jordan Kiper
Biography
Cathy J. Schlund-Vials (Associate Professor of English and Asian/Asian American Studies, University of Connecticut, USA) is author of two monographs: Modeling Citizenship: Jewish and Asian American Writing and War, Genocide, and Justice: Cambodian American Memory Work. Her research interests include human rights, critical refugee studies, comparative ethnic studies, Asian American studies, and memory studies.
Samuel Martínez (Associate Professor of Anthropology and Latin American Studies, University of Connecticut, USA) studies the rights mobilizations of Haitian immigrants and Haitian descendants in the Dominican Republic, north-south human rights knowledge exchange, and contemporary anti-slavery reporting.






