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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The Martin Luther King Jr. Distinguished Lecture Series
will host Dr. Christian Davenport, associate professor of political science at the
University of Maryland-College Park, for events at The University of Alabama and Stillman
College on Oct. 28.
Now in its fifth year, the series attracts well-known scholars and civil rights
advocates to the Tuscaloosa community to discuss the past and future of the ideas
of social justice and non-violence that King championed. The series is a joint effort
of UA, Stillman and Shelton State Community College.
Davenport, who also is a senior fellow and director of research at the Center for
International Development and Conflict Management, will give a presentation from a
paper titled “Massacres and Me” at 11 a.m. at Stillman’s Stinson
Auditorium.
In it, Davenport will discuss the difficult road he has traveled to become one of
the foremost scholars in the world today on the politics of genocide, contentious
politics – domestic conflict, human rights violations and state repression – democracy
and regime change.
That evening, he will give a multimedia presentation on the UA campus at 7 p.m. in
room 125 ten Hoor Hall (Stadium Drive and Marr’s Spring Road). This program,
titled “Getting Rwanda Right: Genocide and Social Science Research,” will
mix lecture with visual images from his field research in Rwanda.
Dr. Amilcar Shabazz, director of African American Studies and co-organizer of the
Martin Luther King Jr. Distinguished Lecture Series, said that “While in Rwanda
researching genocide and reconciliation, Christian [Davenport] witnessed the good,
the bad and the ugly of what happens when the world ignores a nation that falls into
an all-out civil war. His presentation will help us grapple with how in 100 days close
to a million people were slaughtered in this small African country a decade ago.
“Lest we forget and allow a tragedy of the same order of magnitude to unfold
in Iraq, Sudan, and Haiti or anywhere else on the planet, we need to engage this research,” Shabazz
said.
Davenport’s lecture at UA is sponsored by the UA African American Studies program,
the department of political science, the Capstone International Center, and the department
of geography.
Both lectures are free and open to the public.
Davenport’s primary research interests include human rights violations, social
movements, measurement and racism. He is the author of numerous articles appearing
in the American Political Science Review, the American Journal of Political
Science, the Journal of Politics, the Journal of Conflict Resolution,
Political Research Quarterly, Comparative Political Studies, and the Monthly
Review (among others).
He is the editor of “Paths to State Repression: Human Rights Violations and
Contentious Politics” (Boulder: Rowman & Littlefield. 2000), and he is currently
working on a book “The Rashomon Effect in the Social Sciences: Contentious Politics,
Data Generation and the Importance of Perspective.” Another co-edited volume
is currently under review: “Repression and Mobilization: What Do We Know and
Where Do We Go From Here?”
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