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Concordia’s genocide research a force in Ottawa

Senator Roméo Dallaire says Concordia’s Montreal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies is gaining political traction
March 21, 2014
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By Scott McCulloch


Concordia’s Montreal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies (MIGS) has emerged as a strident voice in Ottawa, Senator Roméo Dallaire told guests at Montreal’s University Club on February 14.

“MIGS pumps oxygen through our blood in Parliament,” said Dallaire, a senior fellow of the institute.

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The luncheon, held in Dallaire’s honour, was organized by Advancement and Alumni Relations to showcase MIGS’ research achievements and unveil its new projects.

Alan Shepard
Concordia president Alan Shepard
MIGS_RD
LGen Roméo Dallaire (ret), MIGS Senior Fellow
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Frank Chalk, MIGS Director | All photo credits: Warren Zelman Photography

Concordia President Alan Shepard lauded MIGS’ enviable track record. “The work of Senator Dallaire and MIGS fellows brings renown to Concordia,” he said. “It brings relief to so many people around the world.”

In 2010, MIGS published Mobilizing the Will to Intervene: Leadership to Prevent Mass Atrocities, a report that compared American and Canadian policies towards atrocities in Rwanda in 1994 and Kosovo in 1999.

The report prompted the U.S. to act on MIGS’ recommendations, including the creation of a senior position in the White House focused on mass atrocities.

MIGS’ Director Frank Chalk stressed a need to push the institute’s research findings and advocacy even farther.

“We who are humanitarians feel enormous empathy for the victims of genocide,” Chalk said. “Many of us have discovered, however, that our empathy is not enough.”



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