![]() |
Media Contact:
Barry Jagoda, (858) 534-8567 The Harvard University scholar will speak on topics emerging from her highly praised book, A Problem From Hell: America and the Age of Genocide, at 7 p.m., Oct. 8, in RIMAC Arena on the UCSD campus. As a journalist and founding executive director of Harvard’s Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, Power’s approach has been to raise questions by studying the major cases of genocide during the past 100 years, beginning with the Turkish killings of Armenians before World War I. She questions why the U.S. government failed to intercede and why other interests always seemed to keep the United States as a bystander rather than an active opponent of what later became known as crimes against humanity. Power draws on
her own reporting from the Balkans, her Harvard Law School education,
and her in-depth research into Nazi atrocities and the dark periods of
civil war and genocide in Cambodia, Rwanda and elsewhere. She has heroes,
including American policy makers such as Sen. William Proxmire and Henry
Morgenthau, the U.S. Ambassador to Turkey who urged the Wilson Administration
to help the Armenians. Power argues that the few who did take a stand
against genocide show what actions the United States might have taken
in the face of facts of crimes against peoples. “Samantha
Power is an ideal speaker to inaugurate our new college facilities,”
said Provost Ann Craig. “With her courage and scholarship, she is
a role model for the kind of active, committed internationalism that we
encourage,” added the Eleanor Roosevelt College academic leader.
|
Copyright ©2001 Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Last modifed
|