Version of record first published: 10 May 2012.This article analyzes the debate about the controversial Canadian Museum for Human Rights by reconstructing the efforts to establish a government-sponsored Holocaust museum from the late 1990s. This history reveals that the controversy inheres in part in the conflation of the rival imperatives to promote atrocity memorialization on the one hand, above all of the Holocaust, and human rights education/activism on the other. In multicultural Canada, memory regimes, which utilize the egalitarian concepts of genocide or crimes against humanity to emphasize the suffering of all, also vie for official validation with the Holocaust uniqueness agenda. The article concludes that the museum is caught on t...
As Canada prepares for its 150th birthday, within the context of its colonial legacy, silenced histo...
In this article, we examine the multiculturalization of Canadian heritage, and, in particular, the s...
This piece analyzes the mission statements of four institutions that commemorate Genocide: The Unite...
This essay contextualises the recent controversy about the Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR), ...
This chapter analyzes the background anxieties about “hidden genocides” in the Canadian debate about...
In February 1998 the Senate Subcommittee of Veteran Affairs held hearings to discuss a proposed Holo...
In the past decade, scholars have proposed that Holocaust memory facilitates the spread of universal...
Holocaust monuments are often catalysts in the ‘nationalization’ of the Holocaust – the process by w...
This article explores how the prescriptive expectation placed on governments to confront violent pas...
The Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR) is part of a global movement of human-rights–driven muse...
This article examines a range of issues surrounding the proposition that museums are excellent sites...
This paper addresses Canada’s first national monument to the Holocaust: the National Holocaust Monum...
This essay considers the intentions of the twenty-first century narrative history museum in relation...
Human rights have become highly discussed topic and one of the dominant themes in the museum field. ...
As Canada prepares for its 150th birthday, within the context of its colonial legacy, silenced histo...
As Canada prepares for its 150th birthday, within the context of its colonial legacy, silenced histo...
In this article, we examine the multiculturalization of Canadian heritage, and, in particular, the s...
This piece analyzes the mission statements of four institutions that commemorate Genocide: The Unite...
This essay contextualises the recent controversy about the Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR), ...
This chapter analyzes the background anxieties about “hidden genocides” in the Canadian debate about...
In February 1998 the Senate Subcommittee of Veteran Affairs held hearings to discuss a proposed Holo...
In the past decade, scholars have proposed that Holocaust memory facilitates the spread of universal...
Holocaust monuments are often catalysts in the ‘nationalization’ of the Holocaust – the process by w...
This article explores how the prescriptive expectation placed on governments to confront violent pas...
The Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR) is part of a global movement of human-rights–driven muse...
This article examines a range of issues surrounding the proposition that museums are excellent sites...
This paper addresses Canada’s first national monument to the Holocaust: the National Holocaust Monum...
This essay considers the intentions of the twenty-first century narrative history museum in relation...
Human rights have become highly discussed topic and one of the dominant themes in the museum field. ...
As Canada prepares for its 150th birthday, within the context of its colonial legacy, silenced histo...
As Canada prepares for its 150th birthday, within the context of its colonial legacy, silenced histo...
In this article, we examine the multiculturalization of Canadian heritage, and, in particular, the s...
This piece analyzes the mission statements of four institutions that commemorate Genocide: The Unite...