As part of ŠTO TE NEMA’s ongoing commitment to building community and raising genocide awareness, we offer you a small selection of resources we have found helpful over the years to understand the history, politics and contemporary understanding of the 1995 Srebrenica genocide. We invite you to join us in continuing to learn from and listen to survivors as a way to resist denial and reclaim a future of peace together.
The main source for anything related to Srebrenica >> MEMORIAL CENTER SREBRENICA
RELEVANT BLOG POSTS AND MEDIA ARTICLES:
“I Can Never Forget the Bosnian Genocide. But Others are Trying to Rewrite History.” By Janine di Giovanni, February 3, 2020. The Washington Post.
“How Radovan Karadzic Led an American Scholar Into a Labyrinth of Genocide Denial.” By Edina Becirevic, January 29, 2020. The Intercept.
“Srebrenica Revisited.” By Seema Jilani, July 10, 2015. The New York Times.
“20 Years Since the Srebrenica Massacre.” By Alan Taylor. July 9, 2015. The Atlantic.
“How Britain and the US Decided to Abandon Srebrenica to its Fate.” By Florence Hartmann and Ed Vulliamy. July 4, 2015. The Guardian.
“Life in the Valley of Death.” By Scott Anderson. Photos by Paolo Pellegrin. May 28, 2014. The New York Times.
REPORTS AND OTHER POLICY RELATED DOCUMENTS:
The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia published a summary of ‘Facts about Srebrenica’
ACADEMIC SOURCES ON THE SREBRENICA GENOCIDE AND ITS AFTERMATH:
Genocide on the Drina River. Bećirević, Edina. (2014). Yale University Press.
Apologising for Srebrenica: The declaration of the Serbian parliament, the European Union and the politics of compromise. Dragović-Soso, Jasna. (2012). East European Politics, 28(2), 163–179.
“Što Te Nema?”: Transnational Cultural Production in the Diaspora in Response to the Srebrenica Genocide. Karabegović, Dzeneta. (2014). Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 20(4), 455–475.
From the Selimović Case to the Srebrenica Commission: The Fight to Recognize the Srebrenica Genocide. Karčić, Hikmet. (2015). Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 35(3), 370–379.
Srebrenica in the Aftermath of Genocide. Nettelfield, Laura, & Wagner, Sarah. (2014). Cambridge University Press.
Under the UN Flag: The International Community and the Srebrenica Genocide. Nuhanović, Hasan. (2007). DES.
Turning Darkness Into Light: The Quest for Justice by Srebrenica’s Mothers. Subašić, Munira. (2011). In R. H. Steinberg (Ed.), Assessing the Legacy of the ICTY. Brill.
To Know Where He Lies: DNA Technology and the Search for Srebrenica’s Missing. Wagner, Sarah. (2008). University of California Press.