NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

Srebrenica, 25 years later: Lessons from the massacre that ended the Bosnian conflict and unmasked a genocide

  • Written by Tom Mockaitis, Professor of History, DePaul University
imageBosnia's memorial cemetery of the 1995 Srebrenica massacre, which is still receiving new remains as more genocide victims are identified. Elvis Barukcic/AFP via Getty Images

Europe’s worst massacre since World War II occurred 25 years ago this July. From July 11 to 19, in 1995, Bosnian Serb forces murdered 7,000 to 8,000 Muslim men and boys in...

Read more: Srebrenica, 25 years later: Lessons from the massacre that ended the Bosnian conflict and unmasked...

More Articles ...

  1. Sending international students home would sap US influence and hurt the economy
  2. COVID-19 makes clear that bioethics must confront health disparities
  3. Street vendors make cities livelier, safer and fairer – here's why they belong on the post-COVID-19 urban scene
  4. Corporate activism is more than a marketing gimmick
  5. 5 COVID-19 myths politicians have repeated that just aren't true
  6. Synthetic odors created by activating brain cells help neuroscientists understand how smell works
  7. Why are scientists trying to manufacture organs in space?
  8. Brazil's Bolsonaro has COVID-19 – and so do thousands of Indigenous people who live days from the nearest hospital
  9. 3 things 'ZeroZeroZero' gets right about the cocaine trade
  10. It takes a long time to vote
  11. Supreme Court hands victory to school voucher lobby – will religious minorities, nonbelievers and state autonomy lose out?
  12. COVID-19: As offices reopen, here's what to expect if you're worried about getting sick on the job
  13. Should architecturally significant low-income housing be preserved?
  14. Is the COVID-19 pandemic cure really worse than the disease? Here's what our research found
  15. Rare neurological disorder, Guillain-Barre Syndrome, linked to COVID-19
  16. There are many leaders of today's protest movement – just like the civil rights movement
  17. Supreme Court reforms, strengthens Electoral College
  18. Social isolation: The COVID-19 pandemic's hidden health risk for older adults, and how to manage it
  19. What makes a 'wave' of disease? An epidemiologist explains
  20. How did 'white' become a metaphor for all things good?
  21. Digital contact tracing's mixed record abroad spells trouble for US efforts to rein in COVID-19
  22. Lessons from the 1918 pandemic: A U.S. city's past may hold clues
  23. Decades of failed reforms allow continued police brutality and racism
  24. Retractions and controversies over coronavirus research show that the process of science is working as it should
  25. 'Renewable' natural gas may sound green, but it's not an antidote for climate change
  26. Islam's anti-racist message from the 7th century still resonates today
  27. Six eyewitnesses misidentified a murderer – here's what went wrong in the lineup
  28. Nearly 3 in 4 US moms were in the workforce before the COVID-19 pandemic – is that changing?
  29. Ethical challenges loom over decisions to resume in-person college classes
  30. Why some Americans seem more 'American' than others
  31. A leading infectious disease expert explains how to be as safe as possible on this very different Fourth
  32. Don't expect Biden's VP pick to make or break the 2020 election
  33. How to manage plant pests and diseases in your victory garden
  34. Mexico City buried its rivers to prevent disease and unwittingly created a dry, polluted city where COVID-19 now thrives
  35. Presidents' panel: How COVID-19 will change higher education
  36. Black churches have lagged in moving online during the pandemic – reaching across generational lines could help
  37. Why 'I was just being sarcastic' can be such a convenient excuse
  38. Police with lots of military gear kill civilians more often than less-militarized officers
  39. Do dogs really see in just black and white?
  40. Group testing for coronavirus – called pooled testing – could be the fastest and cheapest way to increase screening nationwide
  41. The invention of satanic witchcraft by medieval authorities was initially met with skepticism
  42. Video: What we can learn from a book documenting the first vaccine, for smallpox
  43. Which drugs and therapies are proven to work, and which ones don't, for COVID-19?
  44. With the help of trained dolphins, our team of researchers is building a specialized drone to help us study dolphins in the wild
  45. From marmots to mole-rats to marmosets – studying many genes in many animals is key to understanding how humans can live longer
  46. COVID-19 and teletherapy may be changing how much you know about your therapist
  47. COVID-19 and telehealth may be changing how much you know about your therapist
  48. A summer of protest, unemployment and presidential politics – welcome to 1932
  49. Fireworks can torment veterans and survivors of gun violence with PTSD – here's how to celebrate with respect for those who served
  50. Monks, experts in social distancing, find strength in isolation