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Lecture Series – Fall 2008

By Aaron Solle on August 20, 2008

Steven Wax

17 September/the Robert Ho Center, 105 Lawrence Hall/8:00PM
“Kafka Comes To America: A Public Defender’s Fight for Justice in the War on Terror from Peshawar to Portland.”

Oregon Federal Defender, Steven T. Wax, will be speaking about the threat to civil liberties, at home and abroad, from the policies of the Bush administration in the ‘war on terror.’ Based on his experiences representing U.S. citizens arrested in connection with terrorist acts in Oregon and seven men held as enemy combatants in prison in Guantanamo Bay, Wax will explore the legal justifications offered for indefinite detention and coercive interrogation and the threat we all face from the policies the administration has pursued. His talk will weave together the legal and political debate with an account of the actual experiences of defendants incarcerated under emergency powers.

Robert Vitalis

13 October/27 Persson Hall, auditorium/5:00PM
“The Hidden History of Race in American International Relations.”

In this presentation, Professor Vitalis examines the origins of the study of international relations in the United States at the turn of the twentieth century. He argues that until we loosen the hold a particular idea has over our contemporary imaginations—that the subject matter of international relations is found on one side of a line between the “domestic” and the “foreign”—it will not be possible to appreciate the full significance of the fact that the scholars who wrote the first articles, papers, treatises, and textbooks in international relations all saw the “Negro problem” in the South as something to be included within the new interdisciplinary field of study. Political scientists theorizing about what they called “race development” (the title of the first journal of IR in fact) imagined two fundamentally different logics and processes at work, and thus different rules that were to be applied, across the boundary dividing Anglo-Saxons or Teutons and the inferior races found in Indian Territory, New Mexico, the Philippines, the Caribbean, Africa, and Oceania. Here was political science’s original and signal contribution to the theory and practice of hierarchy, a theory that W. E. B. Du Bois and the handful of black political scientists who followed him challenged in his continuing arguments about the global color line.

Jonathan Hyslop

22 October/the Robert Ho Center, 105 Lawrence Hall/5:00PM
“The Law of War and the Invention of the Concentration Camp 1896-1904.”

1899 saw the convening of the First Hague Peace conference, the most comprehensive inter-state attempt to that time to prevent war and limit its conduct. Yet the years immediately before and after the conference saw the emergence of an appalling new institution of war against civilians – the concentration camp. In his presentation, Jonathan Hyslop addresses this paradoxical conjunction. He traces the emergence of concentration camps in the Cuban Rebellion against Spain, the Boer War, the American-Filipino War and the German repression of revolts in South-west Africa, and asks why the new humanitarian law of war was unable to restrain this development. The ways in which international publics debating the laws of war were constituted around these conflicts are explored in an investigation of the different responses of European socialists, Asian nationalists, and metropolitan political leaders to such questions. The lecture critically considers explanatory frameworks for the camp phenomenon offered by major theorists such as Arendt and Bauman. The central argument is that the dynamics of war-fighting itself need to placed at the center of an analysis of the birth of the concentration camp.

Aaron David Miller

27 October/ 105 Little Hall, Golden Auditorium / 5:00PM
“The Much Too Promised Land: The U.S., the Arab-Israeli Issue, and the Middle East.”

Why has the world’s greatest superpower failed to broker, or impose, a solution in the Middle East? If a solution is possible, what would it take? And why after so many years of struggle and failure, with the entire region even more unsettled than ever, should Americans even care? Is Israel/Palestine really the “much too promised land”? In attempting to answer these questions, Aaron Miller shatters many preconceived notions, tackling the complicated issues of culture, religion, domestic politics, and national security that have defined—and often derailed—a half century of diplomacy

Ian Roxborough

10 November/the Robert Ho Center, 105 Lawrence Hall/5:00PM
“Can the US win the next war? The return of the Third World.”

A debate divides the Pentagon: should the US military prepare for a future of messy, low-intensity conflicts in the Third World, of which Iraq and Afghanistan are merely the first campaigns in a long war, or should it focus its efforts on deterring war with an emerging peer competitor such as China or Russia? Ian Roxborough will describe the ways in which military planners have constructed future scenarios that make sense to them; paradoxically, the professional experiences and organizational locations of members of a military, Roxborough argues, help to define the strategic situations to which soldiers respond. Focusing on Army-Marine Corps manual: FM 3-24/MCWP 3-33.5, entitled Counterinsurgency, he examines how debates within the U.S. defense establishment concerning future wars bring to light the military’s own sociology of knowledge.


Film Series – Fall 2008

By Aaron Solle on August 20, 2008

Films screen on Mondays at 7 p.m.

Obedience

8 September/105 Little Hall, Golden Auditorium/7:00 p.m.
Directed Stanley Milgram, 45 min., 1965.

In 1963, Dr. Stanley Milgram, a psychologist at Yale University, advertised for volunteers to participate in a memory experiment. The volunteers are asked to punish other subjects who remember incorrectly – by shocking them with electricity. The varied responses of the volunteers raise significant questions about legitimate authority, the responsibility to obey commands, and the capacity of human beings to hurt one another. While the experiment took place over 40 years ago, the questions raised in Obedience have become newly relevant remain important in the context of current debates about torture and human rights in the U.S.-led War on Terror.

Discovering Dominga: A Survivor’s Story

15 September/105 Little Hall, Golden Auditorium/7:00 p.m.
Directed by Patricia Flynn, 60 min., 2003

In Discovering Dominga, a young Iowa mother, Denese Joy Becker, comes to understand that she is a survivor of the 1982 Rio Negro massacre in Guatemala. At the time of the massacre, Denese Becker was a nine-year-old Mayan Indian girl named Dominga Sic Ruiz. Her parents and more than 200 other residents of Rio Negro, who resisted relocation to make way for a dam, were murdered by the state. After the massacre, Dominga escaped to the mountains and was later adopted by a couple from Iowa. The film follows Dominga’s adult journey to uncover her past and work to bring the military commanders responsible for the massacre to justice.

In Rwanda We Say…The Family That Does Not Speak Dies

22 September/105 Little Hall, Golden Auditorium/7:00 p.m.
Directed by Anne Aghion, 57 min., 2004.

In Rwanda We Say … begins as 16,000 genocide suspects are released across Rwanda, subsequent to confessing and having served the maximum sentence the Gacaca citizen-based-justice tribunals would eventually impose. The film follows the release and return of one man to his village. As villagers articulate their ideas, to Aghion and to one another, the initial presence of distrust and fear of violence among the villagers slowly changes.

Kippur

6 October/105 Little Hall, Golden Auditorium/7:00 p.m.
Directed Amos Gitai, 117 min., 2000

Kippur offers an account of the 1973 Arab-Israeli War through the experiences of two young Israeli soldiers, Weinraub and Ruso, who are members of a helicopter rescuing the wounded Amos Gitai, who served in the war, has created a film striking for the stark textures of violence and daily life that he offers, as well as the collapse of the space between them during war. P-CON’s screening of this film coincides with the 35th anniversary of the beginning of the Arab-Israeli War in 1973.

Taxi to the Dark Side

17 November/105 Little Hall, Golden Auditorium /7:00 p.m.
Directed by Alex Gibney, 106 min., 2007.

Following the life and death of an Afghan taxi driver, Dilawar, Taxi to the Dark Side explores the practices of detention and torture in U.S. interrogation centers in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Guantanamo Bay. Viewers are challenged to consider the implications when the rule of law is abrogated in the service of the “war on terror.” The film poses an unsettling question: what happens when a few men use the wartime powers of the executive to undermine the very principles on which the United States was founded?

** Winner of the 2008 Academy Award for Documentary Feature **

Standard Operating Procedure

1 December/105 Little Hall, Golden Auditorium 7:00 p.m.
Directed by Errol Morris, 116 min., 2008

In Standard Operating Procedure, Morris draws on interviews with five of the seven convicted perpetrators in the Abu Ghraib prison incident to provoke a series of questions about violence, torture, and accountability. Combined with extensive use of the photos taken by U.S. soldiers at Abu Ghraib and recreation of some of the events which took place, the film shows the blurred lines between private/public, state/individual, and following orders/being party to human rights violations. It also raises stark questions about visual media and representation.

** Winner of the Jury Grand Prix at the Berlin International Film Festival **