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January 18, 2023

Academic Programs Director Waller Delivers West Point Lecture

NEW YORK, October 22, 2013 – James Waller, AIPR Academic Programs Director and Cohen Professor of Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Keene State College, delivered a lecture on September 26, 2013, titled, "The Psychology of Perpetration," at the United States Military Academy at West Point. Drawing from his award-winning book,_[Becoming Evil,](http://www.amazon.com/Becoming-Evil-Ordinary-Genocide-Killing/dp/0195148681)_ Waller focused on the ways in which ordinary people are transformed into perpetrators of genocide and crimes against humanity. The lecture, drawing from a wide range of case studies and field research from the Holocaust, Rwanda, the former Yugoslavia, and other regions, also explored the implications of this research for genocide and mass atrocity prevention. "While each of us has the capacity to commit murder, most of us don't," said Waller. "So, for those who do choose to kill in situations of genocide and mass atrocity," he added, "it's important for us to understand the situational and contextual influences that unleashed that capacity. It's only in understanding those influences–how perpetrators are made–that we have any hope of 'unmaking' perpetrators in a preventive sense." Waller outlined the group processes and moral justifications–including conformity, intergroup hostility, obedience to authority, and role acceptance–that can transform a person into a perpetrator. Only by understanding the social psychology behind evil, he said, can we "seek to intervene and prevent it from occurring again." The lecture was organized by [Dr. David Frey](http://www.usma.edu/chgs/SitePages/Faculty.aspx), Associate Professor of History and Director of the [Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at West Point (CHGS)](http://www.usma.edu/chgs/SitePages/Home.aspx), as part of his course, "Genocide and Ethnic Cleansing," which covers theory of genocide, including perpetration, bystandership, and resistance. In 2010, Dr. Frey participated as an evaluator in the U.S. Military edition of the Lemkin Seminar that brought U.S. officers to Auschwitz-Birkenau in Oswiecim, Poland, for one week of education in preventing mass atrocities and protecting civilians during military operations. Roughly 25 cadets and ten faculty members attended the one-hour lecture by Waller, which was sponsored by The Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at West Point. Founded in 2010, the CHGS educates the Corps of Cadets about genocide and mass atrocity and inspires them as officers to the cause of prevention. It acts as an inter-academy hub, creating curricular materials not only for the service academies, but for ROTC and for use by the U.S. Atrocities Prevention Board.
Sheri P. Rosenberg

Policy Papers and Briefs in Prevention

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Research Reports & White Papers

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Beyond Remembering Toolkits

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SNCF Papers

Filling the Silence: A Study in Corporate Holocaust History and the Nature of Corporate Memory
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Auschwitz Institute Annual Reports

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Training Resources

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Booklet on National Mechanisms for the Prevention of Genocide and other Atrocity Crimes (2015-2018)

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Annual Reports of the Latin American Network for Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention

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