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Violence in Eurasia: Historical and Contemporary Approaches 
Yale University 
March 23-25, 2007 

EXTENDED Application Submission Deadline: December 12, 2006 

The Eurasia Program of the Social Science Research Council (SSRC) invites
proposals for a dissertation development workshop, focusing on issues of
violence in Eurasia.  Graduate students at any stage of their dissertation
process (from proposal to write-up) and from any disciplinary or
interdisciplinary program in the humanities or social sciences are eligible
to apply. Proposals may elaborate upon one or more of the following issues,
or applicants may propose their own topics. We particularly encourage
applicants who propose new theoretical perspectives and methodologies and
whose work speaks to a wide scholarly audience.

Violence - the use or threat of physical/psychological force - has played a
role in the exercise of power and the shaping of social relations throughout
history.  The forms and meaning of violence have varied, however, with time,
location, cultural tradition, and political context.  In all eras, in any
given situation, some types of violence are accepted as legitimate, even
necessary, while others are condemned as extreme.  How is violence
interpreted in the Eurasian context?

One has only to mention the tsarist-era anti-Jewish pogroms, the
self-inflicted brutalities of the Stalinist regime, the present government
of Uzbekistan, the Russian Mafia, or the conduct of both parties to the war
in Chechnya to evoke stereotypes of a Eurasian propensity for violence.  

What kind of norms or values have governed the use of violence in the
territory once covered by the Russian empire and the Soviet Union, and now
by the Russian Federation and other successor states?  To what extent have
attitudes and practices converged with or departed from patterns elsewhere?
To what extent do local patterns vary within the region?  What has been the
impact of political, social, and economic change on interpersonal and social
relations?  How has violence been represented through literary and cultural
productions, and what impact has this had on the further propagation of
violent behavior in society?  What have been the responses from individuals,
groups, and states from within and outside the region to violence and
repression?  And does the region deserve its reputation in the West as
lawless and violence-prone?  

For detailed information on application procedures and eligibility
requirements, please visit the Eurasia Program online at
<file://www.ssrc.org/programs/eurasia> www.ssrc.org/programs/eurasia or
contact program staff at [log in to unmask] 

Eurasia Program 
Social Science Research Council 
810 Seventh Avenue 
New York, NY 10019 
Phone: (212) 377-2700 
Fax: (212) 377-2727