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The Master's in Holocaust and Genocide Studies offers an interdisciplinary and comparative one-year programme based on a flexible interpretation of the notion of genocide. You will discuss both the ideology behind a genocide (or mass atrocity) and the context of war or martial law. Attention will also be devoted to research into how later generations have interpreted different genocidal processes.
COURSES SEM 1 SEM 2 SEMESTER 1 SEMESTER 2 EC
  • Core course Holocaust and Genocide Studies
    Period 1
    Period 2
    Period 3
    18

    The aim of this course is to introduce students to the broad range of scholarship, questions and discussions in the field of Holocaust and Genocide Studies. We discuss a wide range of case studies and themes including, but not limited to, Armenia, Cambodia, Rwanda, Yugoslavia, the Middle East, perpetrators and perpetration and colonialism and genocide. Students will learn about the causes and mechanisms of genocide and mass atrocities as well as the transitional justice measures attendant to the aftermath of mass political violence and repression. They will write a research paper on one of the course topics and develop and complete a Master's thesis proposal.

  • Topics in Holocaust Studies
    Period 1
    6

    While Holocaust research was first primarily conducted by intellectuals who had been in exile during the Nazi era and survivor scholars who had emigrated after the war, more scholars than ever before are engaged in the field of Holocaust studies today. The magnitude of the event, the countless number of sources, and the frequent reinterpretation of these sources have resulted in a flourishing field of studies. In this course, the most recent trends as well as the major debates and controversies in Holocaust historiography are discussed. It uses secondary literature, primary sources, oral histories, photographs, art, and literature to examine a wide range of themes, including Jewish responses during the Holocaust, the knowledge contemporaries had of the mass murder of the Jews, and the meaning and usage of photographs of the Holocaust from an interdisciplinary perspective.

  • Topics in Transitional Justice
    Period 2
    6

    The aim of this course is to examine and analyse from a historical perspective the characteristics and problems of transitions from non-democratic/dictatorial/totalitarian/criminal political regimes to the beginnings of democracy and civil society. The course is focused on concepts and comparative cases, and current and past transitional justice-related questions. Students will examine, among others, the experience of Germany at and after the Nuremberg proceedings, transitional justice in Africa, post-Soviet efforts at coming to terms with its Communist past, and the legacy of genocide in former Yugoslavia and elsewhere. In the course of our discussion, we will explore the concepts of victors’ justice, retributive justice, restorative justice, memorialization, memory, rehabilitation, and other means of dealing with the legacy of genocide, crimes against humanity, and mass political repression. Students will gain a framework for understanding the questions and challenges related to transitional justice today.

  • Free-choice electives
    Period 4
    Period 5
    12
  • Master's Thesis History
    Period 4
    Period 5
    Period 6
    18

    The Master's thesis reports on research carried out under the supervision of an academic staff member involved in the programme. The subject of the thesis must be mutually agreed upon by the student and the academic adviser.

Compulsory course
Elective
UvA Course Catalogue: Holocaust and Genocide Studies
Understanding why people commit grave crimes, how they progress, how societies in different temporal, geographical and cultural contexts deal with them are crucial questions posed in this programme. Dr. Thijs Bouwknegt

Credit transfer

Students who show exceptional promise during a regular or professional programme are encouraged to continue their studies in a research programme. Once students are admitted to the research programme, they can transfer credits earned during their previous course of study towards their Research Master's degree. The Examinations Board determines which courses qualify for transfer.

Holocaust and Genocide Studies as a part-time study

The curriculum is also offered as a part-time study, which lasts one and a half years. Students earn a maximum of 40 ECTS credits per year, i.e. 20 credits per semester. Part-time students attend courses together with full-time students. The programme for a part-time study is put together by the student, in mutual consultation with the coordinator of the programme (See: Contact).

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