A dance begins beneath the outstretched branches of the giant umunyinya tree in Rwanda. First there is drumming and clapping, then the lead dancers step into the center of the gathering. The dancing subsides and the gacaca court, the community hearings on the one hundred days of bloodshed known as the Rwandan Genocide, is called into session. This is what the ongoing process of reconciliation looks like nearly twenty years after the brutal, orchestrated murder of almost one million people in Rwanda. But this scene demands questions: How can court testimony be used to rebuild a cohesive national identity for the Hutus and Tutsis? And how is it that dance and theater help to move forward the cause of justice and reconciliation? By document...
Since 2005, just over 12,000 community-based gacaca courts in Rwanda have heard more than 1.2 millio...
In recent decades, national governments and international authorities have increasingly emphasized t...
Reconciliation is among the most contested terms in current peacebuilding and transitional justice d...
While grassroots theatre brings together perpetrators and survivors of the Rwandan genocide, governm...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
This article explores the various legal responses to the genocide in Rwanda through the lenses of tr...
Decades after the atrocious genocide, Rwanda is now a model of resilience and progress on the Africa...
“Memorializing the Genocide of the Tutsi Through Literature, Song, and Performance” examines how the...
In the spring of 1994 the small east African country of Rwanda was devastated by a genocide which cl...
Amidst the history of colonialism, dishonest government, civil conflict, and brutal genocide, the co...
More than a decade after the Rwandan genocide, the sheer magnitude of what took place still has the ...
International aid has influenced and, in part, shaped the artistic sector in Africa's Great Lakes re...
Building on legal anthropology and performance studies, this chapter analyses the Gacaca law talk an...
Ten years ago, genocide ravaged the tiny African nation of Rwanda. In the wake of this violence, Rwa...
Since 2005, just over 12,000 community-based gacaca courts in Rwanda have heard more than 1.2 millio...
In recent decades, national governments and international authorities have increasingly emphasized t...
Reconciliation is among the most contested terms in current peacebuilding and transitional justice d...
While grassroots theatre brings together perpetrators and survivors of the Rwandan genocide, governm...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
Performances of justice and human rights have served as international platforms for truth-telling an...
This article explores the various legal responses to the genocide in Rwanda through the lenses of tr...
Decades after the atrocious genocide, Rwanda is now a model of resilience and progress on the Africa...
“Memorializing the Genocide of the Tutsi Through Literature, Song, and Performance” examines how the...
In the spring of 1994 the small east African country of Rwanda was devastated by a genocide which cl...
Amidst the history of colonialism, dishonest government, civil conflict, and brutal genocide, the co...
More than a decade after the Rwandan genocide, the sheer magnitude of what took place still has the ...
International aid has influenced and, in part, shaped the artistic sector in Africa's Great Lakes re...
Building on legal anthropology and performance studies, this chapter analyses the Gacaca law talk an...
Ten years ago, genocide ravaged the tiny African nation of Rwanda. In the wake of this violence, Rwa...
Since 2005, just over 12,000 community-based gacaca courts in Rwanda have heard more than 1.2 millio...
In recent decades, national governments and international authorities have increasingly emphasized t...
Reconciliation is among the most contested terms in current peacebuilding and transitional justice d...