On Memory and Forgetting: PCRC’s One Million Bones (Part II)
"To speak of public memory as the memory of publics is to speak of more than many individuals remembering the same thing. It is to speak of remembrance together, indeed of remembrance together as a crucial aspect of our togetherness, our existence as a public."
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and the Visual Arts (Part I)
What role can the visual arts play in public health? How can a nation recover from mental health trauma when there are clearly not enough psychologists and psychiatrists to support them? Registered nurse Bruce Clezy presents a 6-part publication series exploring Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and the visual arts.
“As long as they are not shooting…”: Political Culture and Participation in Bosnia-Herzegovina
The recent 20-year anniversary of the Dayton Peace Agreement reified the prospects for change in Bosnia-Herzegovina. Central to these prospects are the ways in which Bosnian citizens think and act politically.
Peace Outside, War Inside
Trauma is not restricted to or suffered by only the generation which experienced the war first-hand. Rather, when not treated appropriately, trauma is often transferred within families from one generation to the next.
No Room for Truth?
How do truth, peace and justice interact in the transitional justice mechanisms established for the former Yugoslavia?
Bosnia’s Plenum: Considering the Rise and Decline of Bottom-up Democracy
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