Cambodia from then to now:
memory and plural identities in the aftermath of genocide
 May 5th, 6th and 7th, 2011

Français
Home

Presenters

Name Affiliation Title of Paper Link to
Abstract
Rithy PANH Film director and Bophana Audio Visual Research Centre (KH)  The Bophana Centre and Khmer memories  
Alex Hinton Rutgers State University NJ (US) Cambodian narrartive: Peace, War, Revolution and Terror Abstract
Carla SHAPIRO University of Toronto (CAN) The Pasts and Present of the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum : Legacies, Naming, Justice Abstract
Chantria TRAM Concordia University (CAN) Someone Between Abstract
Chivy SOK Columbia University (US) From Surviving to Thriving: One Cambodian American Woman’s Transformative Journey in International Human Rights Work Abstract
Frank CHALK Founder of The Montreal Institute of Gencide and Human Rigths Studies (MIGS) A Cambodian Tragedy: The Khmer Rouge in Power Abstract
Rob LEMKIN Co-director of Enemies of the People Enemies of the People (2009)  
Sereikhuoch ENG University of Rhode Island (US) The Role of Possessions in Identity Construction of the 1970s-1980s  Cambodian Generation
Abstract
Elizabeth BECKER Senior correspondent at “The New York Times” and “The Washington Post” On Becker's book "When the War was Over" and a Journalistic account from Cambodia in the 1970s Abstract
Judy L. LEDGERWOOD Northern Illinois University (US) 3 years, 8 months, 20 days: Witnessing the Cambodian Killing Fields – Using live Histories to Create a Museum Exhibit on Khmer Rouge Atrocities Abstract
Leakhena NOU California State University (US) Psycological Legacies of Genocide: The Ongoing Crisis of Cambodian Trauma and Social Health Abstract
Marie LAVOREL Université du Québec à Montréal (Canada) Rithy Panh’s documentary cinema within the framework of a cathartic experience and a symbolic space for an exchange of words (circulation de la parole) Abstract
Michael J. KERSTEN Hong Kong International School (HK) Asian History in Action: Cambodia Abstract
Niborom YOUNG Wellington community (NZ) Unspoken Words : Ten Cambodian Refugee Women in New Zealand
Abstract
Phouséra ING (Séra) Comic strip writer Les ateliers de la mémoire  

Asiroh CHAM
Julie Thi UNDERHILL

UCLA (US) and UC Berkley (US) Memories and Legacies of Cham Genocide in Cambodia: Testimony and Witness through Diasporic Documentary Abstract
Robert PETIT Lawyer Justice Canada and Ex co-prosecutor in the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) Discussion on justice and on the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) by the ex co-prosecutor in the ECCC  
Roshane SAIDNATTAR Film director Survive, In the Heart of the Khmer Rouge Madness (2009)  
Sereyrath SRIN Corporation Intégration Saguenay (Canada) Table ronde : Jeunes de la diaspora et « génération 1.5 » (Round Table: "Generation 1.5", the Young and the Diaspora) Abstract
Sophal EAR U.S. Naval Postgraduate School
and UC Berkeley (US)
Reinventing Ourselves After Genocide: Justice for the Past and Accountability for the Future Abstract
Steven HIGH Canada Research Chair in Public
History at Concordia University
Narratives of Loss and Remembrance : Interviewing Survivors of the Cambodian Genocide in Montreal Abstract
Toni SHAPIRO-PHIM Research and Archiving Khmer Arts (KH) and Cornell University (US) Silences, and the Staging of History Abstract
Trina McKINLAY Concordia University (CAN) Shifting Identity, Traumatic Memory and
Community Integration: Lessons from the Past
Abstract
Yenly T. THACH UCLA   (US) The Repatriation Process of Cambodian Refugees Abstract
Astrid NORÉN-NILSSON University of Cambridge (UK) The (Im)possibility of Cambodian Nationalism - Views from Former Khmer Rouge Communities Abstract
Carole FUJIMURA University of California (religion) Multiple Memories, Multiple Selves: The Nature of Change &  Narrative Abstract
Living Histories Theatre Ensemble Groupe de théâtre collectif Histoires de vie/ARUC Playback Theatre  
Peter LEUPRECHT Former UN Special Representitive for Human RIghts in Cambodia The Interminable Wait for Justice Abstract
Top