- Title: Monday Brown Bag Lecture - 'The War Crimes Tribunals for Yugoslavia: Are Trials After Atrocities Effective?'
- Host Department:
Institute for the Humanities
- Date: 10/09/2005 - 10/09/2005
- Time: 12:30 PM - 1:30 PM
- Location: Osterman Common Room, 0520 Rackham Building, 915 E Washington St, Ann Arbor
- Contact Information: Doretha Coval
dcoval@umich.edu
734 936 3518
- Description: Human Rights Series
Robert Donia, History, and Steven Ratner, Law
Please note this event begins at the later time of 12:30 PM
- Detailed Information: Robert Donia is a Research Associate at the University of Michigan’s Center for Russian and East European Studies, a Visiting Scholar at the University of California at San Diego, and an Associate Professor of History at the University of Sarajevo. He is the author of Islam under the Double Eagle: The Muslims of Bosnia and Herzegovina, 1878-1914 (1981), and with John V.A. Fine, co-author of Bosnia and Herzegovina: A Tradition Betrayed (1994). He recently completed a book on the history of Sarajevo.
Steven R. Ratner came to the UM Law School in 2004. His research has focused on new challenges facing new governments and international institutions after the Cold War, including ethnic conflict, territorial borders, implementation of peace agreements, and accountability for human rights violations. Among his publications are three books: The New UN Peacekeeping: Building Peace in Lands of Conflict After the Cold War (St. Martin’s, 1995); Accountability for Human Rights Atrocities in International Law: Beyond the Nuremberg Legacy (Oxford, 1997 and 2001) (co-author); and International Law: Norms, Actors, Process (Aspen, 2002) (co-author).
Human Rights Series