PUBLICATIONS Timothy Williams

 

Book

2020.

The Complexity of Evil. Perpetration and Genocide. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press.

Under contract. Memory Politics in Post-Violence Societies. Roles, Ambivalences, Power. Bristol: Bristol University Press.

 

 

Edited volume

2018.

Perpetrators and Perpetration of Mass Violence. Dynamics, motivations and concepts. Abingdon: Routledge (co-edited with Susanne Buckley-Zistel).

 

 

Double-blind peer reviewed journals

2022.

Remembering and silencing complexity in post-genocide memorialisation: Cambodia’s Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum.” Memory Studies 15 (1): 3-19.

2021.

Flexible Ethikgremien. Impulse für die Institutionalisierung ethisch verantwortlicher Feldforschung in der Konflikt- und Fluchtforschung.” Soziale Probleme 32 (1): 97-113 (with Ulrike Krause).

2020.

A 5* destination. The Creation of New Transnational Moral Spaces of Remembrance on TripAdvisor.” International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society (with Susanne Buckley-Zistel)

2020.

Motivational Change of Low-level Perpetrators in Genocide.” Violence. An International Journal 1 (1): 144-165 (with Jan Reinermann).

2019.

Ideological and Behavioural Radicalisation into Terrorism – an Alternative Sequencing.“ Journal for Deradicalisation 19: 50-85.

2019.

Konkurrierende Erinnerungspolitiken in Gedenkstätten. ‚Mnemonische Rollenzuschreibungen’’und Ellipsen im Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum.“ Peripherie 39 (1): 8-25.

2019.

NGO interventions in the post-conflict memoryscape. The effect of competing "mnemonic role attributions" on reconciliation in Cambodia.“ Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding 13 (2): 158-179.

2019.

‚They will rot the society, rot the Party, and rot the army.’ Toxification as an ideology and motivation for perpetrating violence in the Khmer Rouge genocide?Terrorism and Political Violence 31 (3): 494-515 (mit Rhiannon Neilsen).

2018.

Agency, responsibility, and culpability – the complexity of roles and self-representations of perpetrators.“ Journal of Perpetrator Research 2 (1): 39-64.

2018.

Visiting the tiger zone – methodological, conceptual and ethical challenges of ethnographic research on perpetrators.“ International Peacekeeping 25 (5): 610-629.

2017.

Into the mind of evil. A sociological perspective on the role of intent and motivations in genocide.“ Genocide Studies and Prevention 11 (2): 72-87 (with Dominik Pfeiffer).

2017.

Sequence Will Tell! Integrating Temporality into Set-Theoretic Multi-Method Research Combining Comparative Process Tracing and Qualitative Comparative Analysis.“ International Journal of Social Research Methodology 20 (2): 121-135 (with Sergio Gemperle).

2016.

More lessons learned from the Holocaust - towards a complexity-embracing approach to why genocide occurs.“ Genocide Studies and Prevention 9 (3): 137-153.

2016.

Beyond Peace vs. Justice: Assessing Transitional Justice’s Impact on Enduring Peace using Qualitative Comparative Analysis.“ Transitional Justice Review 1 (4): 96-123 (with Mariam Salehi).

2016.

„Opportunism, authority and ideology. On the motivations of Turkish perpetrators as portrayed in the 1919 War Crimes trials.“ International Journal of Armenian Genocide Studies 3.

2014.

The Complexity of Evil: a Multi-Faceted Approach to Genocide Perpetration.“ Zeitschrift für Friedens- und Konfliktforschung 3 (1): 71-98.

 

 

Chapters in edited volumes

2021.

“Resilience in Post-Khmer Rouge Cambodia: Systemic Dimensions and the Limited Contributions of Transitional Justice.” In: Janine Natalya Clark and Michael Terence Ungar (eds.). Resilience, Adaptive Peacebuilding and Transitional Justice: How Societies Recover after Collective Violence. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: 164-186.

2020.

“Victims everywhere, perpetrators nowhere – on the methodological, conceptual and ethical challenges of locating and talking to perpetrators in Cambodia.” In: Kjell Anderson and Erin Jessee (eds.). Researching Perpetrators of Genocide. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press: 49-66.

2020.

“Perpetrator Research.” In: Oliver Richmond/Gëzim Visoka (eds.). The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Peace and Conflict Studies. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan.

2020.

“Teaching about Perpetrators and Perpetration in Genocide.” In: Samuel Totten (ed.). Teaching About Genocide: Advice and Suggestions from Secondary Level Teachers and Professors. Volume Three. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield: 111-116.

2020.

The Potential and Limitations of Student Fieldwork on Continents and in Nations Other Than Their Own.” In: Samuel Totten (ed.). Teaching About Genocide: Advice and Suggestions from Secondary Level Teachers and Professors. Volume Three. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield: 245-252.

2019.

“Visiting the tiger zone – methodological, conceptual and ethical challenges of ethnographic research on perpetrators.” In: Gearoid Millar (ed.). Engaging Ethnographic Peace Research. Abingdon: Routledge: 14-33 (re-print of the International Peacekeeping article).

2019.

“Frieden und Transitional Justice.” In: Hans J. Gießmann/Bernhard Rinke (eds.). Handbuch Frieden. 2nd edition. Wiesbaden: Springer VS: 731-740 (with Mariam Salehi).

2018.

“‘I am not, what I am.’ A typological approach to individual (in)action in the Holocaust.” In: Christina Morina/Krijn Thijs (eds.). Probing the Limits of Categorization:  The Bystander in Holocaust History. New York: Berghahn.

2018.

“Perpetrator-victims. How universal victimhood in Cambodia impacts dealing with the past and transitional justice measures.” In: Nanci Adler (ed.). Understanding the Age of Transitional Justice: Narratives in Historical Perspective. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press: 194-212.

2018.

“Perpetrators and Perpetration of Mass Violence: an introduction.” In: Timothy Williams/Susanne Buckley-Zistel (eds.). Perpetrators and Perpetration of Mass Violence. Dynamics, motivations and concepts. Abingdon: Routledge: 1-14 (with Susanne Buckley-Zistel).

2018.

“Thinking beyond perpetrators, bystanders, heroes: a typology of action in genocide.” In: Timothy Williams/Susanne Buckley-Zistel (eds.). Perpetrators and Perpetration of Mass Violence. Dynamics, motivations and concepts. Abingdon: Routledge: 17-35.

2017.

“The foot soldiers of evil – on the importance of individual perpetrators in genocide prevention.” In: Samuel Totten (ed.). Last Lectures on the Prevention and Intervention of Genocide (Routledge Studies in Genocide and Crimes against Humanity). Abingdon: Routledge.

 

 

Non-peer reviewed work

2022.

“Warum töten sie? Motivationen von Täter*innen im Völkermord.” Wissenschaft & Frieden.

2020.

A moment of reflection and innovation in perpetrator studies. Review of: Alette Smeulers, Maartje Weerdesteijn and Barbora Holá eds., Perpetrators of International Crimes. Theories, Methods, and Evidence.Journal of Perpetrator Research 3 (1): 258–263.

2020.

“Gedenkstätten als Erinnerungsräume in den Post-Konflikt-Ländern Ruanda und Kambodscha.” In: Charlotte Dany/Christoph Picker (eds.). Mahnmal ehemaliger Westwall – Geteilte Verantwortung für einen Grenzraum. Landau: akademie_skizzen_08.

2019.

Book review: The Justice Facade. Trials of Transition in Cambodia by Alexander Laban Hinton.Genocide Studies and Prevention 13 (2): 152-154.

2018.

Justice and reconciliation for the victims of the Khmer Rouge? Victim participation in Cambodia’s transitional justice process. Research report. Marburg: Centre for Conflict Studies; Phnom Penh: Centre for Study of Humanitarian Law; Bern: swisspeace (with Julie Bernath, Boravin Tann and Somaly Kum).

2018.

Film Review: First They Killed My Father: A Daughter of Cambodia Remembers.“ Genocide Studies and Prevention: 12 (1): 113-114.

2018.

„Die Komplexität des Bösen.“ Wissenschaft & Frieden.

2017.

“Die Herrschaft der Khmer Rouge. Geschichte der fortgesetzten Gewalt in Kambodscha.” In: Bastian Bretthauer/Susanne Lenz/Jutta Werdes (eds.). Kambodscha. Ein politisches Lesebuch. Berlin: regiospectra.

2017.

Book Review: Confronting Evil. Engaging Our Responsibility to Protect by James Waller.” Historical Dialogues, Justice and Memory Network.

2017.

Memory Politics, Cultural Heritage and Peace. Introducing an Analytical Framework to Study Mnemonic Formations.Research Cluster on Peace, Memory & Cultural Heritage Working Papers 1 (with Annika Björkdahl, Susanne Buckley-Zistel, Stefanie Kappler and Johanna Mannergren Selimovic).

2017.

„Why did they join?“ In: Daram Bramsan/Ali Al-Nasani (Hg.). Dealing with the Past: Engaging in the Present. Phnom Penh: Heinrich Böll Foundation Cambodia: 47-51.

2017.

„Entering the Tiger Zone – Eine fotografisch-wissenschaftliche Ausstellung zu Kadern der Khmer Rouge.“ Südostasien - Zeitschrift für Politik • Kultur • Dialog (with photos by Daniel Welschenbach).

2016.

Book review: Man or Monster? The Trial of a Khmer Rouge Torturer by Alexander Laban Hinton.“ Genocide Studies and Prevention 10 (3): 98-100.

2016.

“Warum haben sich ganz normale Menschen an Gewaltexzessen der Roten Khmer beteiligt?” in: Georg Wenz/Sascha Werthes (eds.). Erinnern – Verstehen – Verhindern. Vom schwierigen Umgang mit Verbrechen gegen die Menschlichkeit. Landau: Schriftenreihe der Evangelischen Akademie der Pfalz 02.

2011.

Beyond Development and Counter-Insurgency. Searching for a Political Solution to the Malay Secessionist Conflict in Southern Thailand.“ Scholar Report. London: LSE Asia Research Centre.

2010.

Mindanao’s MoA-AD Debacle – An Analysis of Individuals’ Voices, Provincial Propaganda and National Disinterest.“ Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs 29 (1): 121-144.