In this chapter, I adopt an intersectional approach to examine the impact of personal and social identities on traumatisation processes of national and international researchers of genocide and socio-political violence. I problematise the implicit assumption that primary, secondary and vicarious traumatisation are independent and mutually exclusive, and I introduce the concept intersectional traumatisation to explain how different traumatic processes intersect on multiple and often simultaneous levels through the act of listening, imagining, empathising and experiencing
Trauma theories have acquired paradigmatic significance in the study of war and representations of v...
The twentieth century is the era of human violence and anger, tragedy and trauma. The world in this ...
In the 1994 Rwanda genocide, an estimated 800,000 people were brutally murdered in just thirteen wee...
This personal reflection describes the psychological impact of living and working in post conflict e...
In this chapter, the author reflects on secondary and, to a lesser extent, vicarious trauma among de...
Rigorous, comprehensive and timely research are the cornerstone of social and transformative change....
Different forms of trauma shape our perception of the social reality, ranging from sexual violence i...
This research seeks to understand the relationship between marginalized identities and trauma in ado...
The purpose of this thesis is to address the relative effectiveness and usefulness of intersectional...
We utilize intersectionality as the framework for analyzing and critiquing the literature on the int...
Background: Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a prevalent worldwide problem with devastating outc...
Structural violence refers to injustices embedded in social and institutional structures within soci...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 LicenseThe article highlights the tra...
Notions of whiteness, white supremacy and racial hatred such as the recent multiple racist murders b...
Racialized and gendered police violence is a pernicious problem for Black communities. For my disser...
Trauma theories have acquired paradigmatic significance in the study of war and representations of v...
The twentieth century is the era of human violence and anger, tragedy and trauma. The world in this ...
In the 1994 Rwanda genocide, an estimated 800,000 people were brutally murdered in just thirteen wee...
This personal reflection describes the psychological impact of living and working in post conflict e...
In this chapter, the author reflects on secondary and, to a lesser extent, vicarious trauma among de...
Rigorous, comprehensive and timely research are the cornerstone of social and transformative change....
Different forms of trauma shape our perception of the social reality, ranging from sexual violence i...
This research seeks to understand the relationship between marginalized identities and trauma in ado...
The purpose of this thesis is to address the relative effectiveness and usefulness of intersectional...
We utilize intersectionality as the framework for analyzing and critiquing the literature on the int...
Background: Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a prevalent worldwide problem with devastating outc...
Structural violence refers to injustices embedded in social and institutional structures within soci...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 LicenseThe article highlights the tra...
Notions of whiteness, white supremacy and racial hatred such as the recent multiple racist murders b...
Racialized and gendered police violence is a pernicious problem for Black communities. For my disser...
Trauma theories have acquired paradigmatic significance in the study of war and representations of v...
The twentieth century is the era of human violence and anger, tragedy and trauma. The world in this ...
In the 1994 Rwanda genocide, an estimated 800,000 people were brutally murdered in just thirteen wee...