Human Rights Expert James Waller to Offer 2025 Atrocity Studies Lecture, Genocide Prevention Workshop
At the 2025 Atrocity Studies Lecture鈥攑resented by the School of Education鈥檚 鈥攈uman rights expert James Waller will explore “Becoming Evil: How Ordinary People Commit Mass Atrocity.”
The lecture takes place on Thursday, March 20, from 5 to 6:30 p.m. in Bird Library’s Peter Graham Scholarly Commons (Room 114). The lecture also will be streamed online. More details and a Zoom registration link can be found on the .

Drawing from his award-winning book, “,” Waller will discuss internal and external factors that can lead ordinary people to commit mass atrocities if left unchecked and unexamined. By examining these forces, Waller argues that no country is immune to the potential for atrocity crimes and that this awareness can facilitate atrocity prevention.
On Friday, March 21, Waller will lead a Genocide Prevention Workshop as part of an to mark the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. Taking place in Huntington Hall 107 between 9 and 10:30 a.m., the workshop will present an analysis of genocide in the modern world that draws out the lessons to be learned in preventing genocide, further atrocities once genocide has begun and future atrocities when a society rebuilds after genocide.
is the inaugural Christopher J. Dodd Chair in Human Rights Practice and Director of the Dodd Human Rights Impact Programs for the Gladstein Family Human Rights Institute at the University of Connecticut. His other books include “Confronting Evil: Engaging Our Responsibility to Prevent Genocide,” and “A Troubled Sleep: Risk and Resilience in Contemporary Northern Ireland.”
Other events during the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination are 鈥溾 at the Syracuse University Art Museum; the book talk 鈥淩epresentation Revolution: Black Twitter鈥檚 Lasting Impact on Television,鈥 with Sherri Williams (10:30 a.m.; Newhouse 3, Room 434); and human rights tabling and open houses between 1 and 5 p.m. at , the , , and the .
Convening speakers from disciplines at the intersection of history, memory, and international human rights, the annual Atrocity Studies Lecture is supported by Lauri 鈥77 and Jeffrey Zell 鈥77. The 2025 spring lecture is co-sponsored by the following Syracuse University departments and programs: , , , , , and the .