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For further information contact:
Carnegie Corporation of New York
Public Affairs 212-207-6273
Carnegie Scholar on Torture and Democracy
According
to 2003 Carnegie
Scholar Darius Rejali, human rights monitoring doesn't necessarily
stop torture. Rejali, a professor of political science at Reed College
and an internationally recognized expert on modern torture, says
it simply causes torturers to use techniques that leave no physical
scars.
Rejali’s
new book Torture
and Democracy (Princeton University Press) is a comprehensive
and unnerving examination of modern torture. He takes the reader
from the late nineteenth century to the aftermath of Abu Ghraib,
from slavery and the electric chair to electro-torture in American
inner cities, and from French and British colonial prison cells
and the Spanish-American War to the fields of Vietnam, the wars
of the Middle East, and the new democracies of Latin America and
Europe.
Listen
to podcasts of Darius Rejali on WNYC
or at the Carnegie
Council for Ethics in International Affairs.
The Carnegie Scholars program allows independent-minded thinkers
to pursue original projects oriented toward catalyzing intellectual
discourse as well as guiding more focused and pragmatic policy discussions.
Scholars are selected each year not only for their originality and
proven intellectual capacity, but for their demonstrated ability
to communicate their ideas in ways that can catalyze public discourse.
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