Cataclysm within the Court: The Bosnian Genocide Case and its Implications on Historical Understanding of Calamity

Disciplines

Holocaust and Genocide Studies | Legal | Political History

Abstract (300 words maximum)

The Bosnian Genocide remains one of the most challenging cases within the history of modern conflict and calamity. As the first occurrence in which the International Court of Justice applied the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide to a state, the International Court of Justice's legal proceedings on the Bosnian Genocide set a new standard for the obligations of the international community to act in the occurrence of genocide. This research aims to clarify the nature of the 1992-1995 conflict between the nations of Serbia-Montenegro and Bosnia-Herzegovina using primary source documentation, modern commentary, and the codification of genocide prevention under the United Nations arbitration between Bosnia and Serbia. It also serves to identify how the understanding of the Bosnian Genocide has changed over time within both the legal discipline and the historicization of violence as a whole.

Academic department under which the project should be listed

RCHSS - History & Philosophy

Primary Investigator (PI) Name

Ryan Ronnenberg

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Cataclysm within the Court: The Bosnian Genocide Case and its Implications on Historical Understanding of Calamity

The Bosnian Genocide remains one of the most challenging cases within the history of modern conflict and calamity. As the first occurrence in which the International Court of Justice applied the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide to a state, the International Court of Justice's legal proceedings on the Bosnian Genocide set a new standard for the obligations of the international community to act in the occurrence of genocide. This research aims to clarify the nature of the 1992-1995 conflict between the nations of Serbia-Montenegro and Bosnia-Herzegovina using primary source documentation, modern commentary, and the codification of genocide prevention under the United Nations arbitration between Bosnia and Serbia. It also serves to identify how the understanding of the Bosnian Genocide has changed over time within both the legal discipline and the historicization of violence as a whole.