This article explores how devolved outreach work for the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia works to govern the past as it acts to reshape and reframe potentially ambivalent and conflicting memories of political violence. The article specifically examines an example of outreach targeting a former Khmer Rouge community that has been situated as a key party in Cambodia's attempts to realize 'justice' and 'reconciliation'. The article analyses the sites and crucibles of memory that outreach work for the court utilizes in licensing a particular reading of Cambodia's experiences of war and genocide. First, the article shows how museum and memorial sites and technologies produce acquiescent, ambivalent and resistant effects among ou...
Full article will be available pending publisher authorisation.The Extraordinary Chambers in the Cou...
This article examines victim participation at Cambodia’s hybrid tribunal, the Extraordinary Chambers...
Memorialisation has become a mainstream feature of transitional justice in recent decades; one that ...
This article explores how devolved outreach work for the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cam...
This article considers the reproduction of perpetrator memories to reflect on processes of reconcili...
This paper addresses the politics of memory in post-genocide Cambodia. Since 1979 genocide has been ...
After nearly 40 years, some of the key leaders of the former Khmer Rouge genocidal regime are facing...
This article considers ways people in Cambodia narrate the Khmer Rouge regime and its genocide outsi...
The Khmer Rouge genocide in Cambodia took place between 1975 and 1979, decimating an estimate of 1.7...
Today, Cambodia houses one of the seven wonders of the world – the Angkor Wat. Beyond the splendor a...
textabstractThirty years after the collapse of the Khmer Rouge regime (1975-1979) how do Cambodians ...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2006 Dr. Rachel Bethany HughesThis thesis is about the re...
This paper, based on field research and oral interviews with museum attendees in the United States a...
What is the role of exhibition and historical memory in promoting reconciliation at the cultural, ra...
2014-07-10Contested Commemorations examines representations of the Cambodian genocide in photography...
Full article will be available pending publisher authorisation.The Extraordinary Chambers in the Cou...
This article examines victim participation at Cambodia’s hybrid tribunal, the Extraordinary Chambers...
Memorialisation has become a mainstream feature of transitional justice in recent decades; one that ...
This article explores how devolved outreach work for the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cam...
This article considers the reproduction of perpetrator memories to reflect on processes of reconcili...
This paper addresses the politics of memory in post-genocide Cambodia. Since 1979 genocide has been ...
After nearly 40 years, some of the key leaders of the former Khmer Rouge genocidal regime are facing...
This article considers ways people in Cambodia narrate the Khmer Rouge regime and its genocide outsi...
The Khmer Rouge genocide in Cambodia took place between 1975 and 1979, decimating an estimate of 1.7...
Today, Cambodia houses one of the seven wonders of the world – the Angkor Wat. Beyond the splendor a...
textabstractThirty years after the collapse of the Khmer Rouge regime (1975-1979) how do Cambodians ...
Deposited with permission of the author. © 2006 Dr. Rachel Bethany HughesThis thesis is about the re...
This paper, based on field research and oral interviews with museum attendees in the United States a...
What is the role of exhibition and historical memory in promoting reconciliation at the cultural, ra...
2014-07-10Contested Commemorations examines representations of the Cambodian genocide in photography...
Full article will be available pending publisher authorisation.The Extraordinary Chambers in the Cou...
This article examines victim participation at Cambodia’s hybrid tribunal, the Extraordinary Chambers...
Memorialisation has become a mainstream feature of transitional justice in recent decades; one that ...