James Waller, Ph.D.

Christopher J. Dodd Chair in Human Rights Practice University of Connecticut

  • Storrs CT

Dr. Waller is an expert in Holocaust and genocide studies, perpetrator behavior, and genocide awareness and prevention

Contact

University of Connecticut

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Biography

James Waller, Ph.D., is the inaugural Christopher J. Dodd Chair in Human Rights Practice and director of the Dodd Human Rights Impact Programs for the Gladstein Family Human Rights Institute at the University of Connecticut. In addition to his faculty appointment in the Gladstein Family Human Rights Institute, he holds a joint appointment in the Department of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages.

Waller is the author of six books, most notably his award-winning Becoming Evil: How Ordinary People Commit Genocide and Mass Killing (Oxford University Press, 2nd ed., 2007), Confronting Evil: Engaging Our Responsibility to Prevent Genocide (Oxford University Press, 2016), and A Troubled Sleep: Risk and Resilience in Contemporary Northern Ireland (Oxford University Press, 2021). In addition, he has published more than thirty articles in peer-reviewed professional journals, contributed over twenty chapters in edited books, and is a co-editor of Historical Dialogue and the Prevention of Mass Atrocities (Routledge, 2020).

Waller also is active in teacher training in Holocaust and genocide studies, has consulted on exhibition development for several museums around the world, and has developed and led seminars to introduce government officials and security sector personnel from around the world to issues of genocide warning and prevention. His fieldwork has included research in Germany, Israel, Northern Ireland, the former Yugoslavia, Rwanda, Uganda, Tanzania, Argentina, Chile, Colombia, and Guatemala.

Waller is an active member of the International Association of Genocide Scholars as well as the International Network of Genocide Scholars. He also is a member of the International Expert Team of the Institute for Research of Genocide Canada and sits on several advisory boards, including World Without Genocide, the Eastern European Holocaust Studies journal of the Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial Center, the Board of Scholars for Facing History & Ourselves, and the Journal of Perpetrator Research.

In 2017, Waller was the inaugural recipient of the Engaged Scholarship Prize from the International Association of Genocide Scholars in recognition of his exemplary engagement in advancing genocide awareness and prevention. Waller has written for The Washington Post, The Irish News, and The Conversation and is frequently interviewed by broadcast and print media, including PBS, CNN, CBC, Al Jazeera, the Los Angeles Times, Salon, National Geographic, and The New York Times.

Areas of Expertise

Social Psychology
Genocide and Genocide Prevention
Human Rights
Genocide Studies
Holocaust Studies
Public Policy
Perpetrator Behavior

Education

University of Kentucky

Ph.D.

Social Psychology

University of Colorado

M.S.

Asbury University

B.S.

Affiliations

  • International Network of Genocide Scholars
  • International Association of Genocide Scholars
  • Institute for Research of Genocide Canada : International Expert Team
  • World Without Genocide
  • Babyn Yar Holocaust Memorial Center : Eastern European Holocaust Studies Journal
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Accomplishments

Engaged Scholarship Prize

2017
International Association of Genocide Scholars

Centennial Global Ethics Fellow

2013-2014
Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs

Institutional Nominee for Joseph B. and Toby Gittler Prize

2012
Brandeis University

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Social

Media Appearances

50 Years Post-Khmer Rouge: Time to Lead on Regional Atrocity Prevention

Cambodianess  online

2025-04-17

Today marks the 50th anniversary of the takeover by the Khmer Rouge of Cambodia from April 1975 to January 1979 that brought the country to one of its darkest periods in recent history – unleashing a reign of terror and horrified mass atrocities.

As Cambodians remember soberly this nightmare of human suffering, we should know that mass atrocities characterized by the horrifying crimes are still occurring all over the world. Accordingly, a renowned human rights expert, James Waller famously stated that “no country is immune to the potential for atrocity crimes and that this awareness can facilitate atrocity prevention.”

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‘With My Own Eyes’: A first-hand recollection by survivors of genocide

The Daily Campus  online

2025-04-07

The Christopher J. Dodd Chair in Human Rights Practice and the Director of the Dodd Human Rights Impact Programs James Waller opened the event by explaining the meaning behind “never again” — a phrase which has been echoed for decades since it first appeared in April 1945 on a sign in a liberated German concentration camp.

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Dodd Center panel examines strategies for peace in Israel, Gaza

The Daily Campus  online

2023-12-04

The event was moderated by James Waller, the Director of Dodd Human Rights Impact Programs.

“We come today in the spirit of dialogue rather than debate,” Waller opened, “A shared connection to human rights should be embodied in how we interact with each other, respond to each other and particularly how we disagree with each other.”

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Articles

Comments on the Awarding of the 10th Thomas J. Dodd Prize in International Justice and Human Rights

Eastern European Holocaust Studies

2023

The University of Connecticut awards the Thomas J. Dodd Prize in International Justice and Human Rights biennially to an individual or group who has made a significant contribution to the advancement of international justice and global human rights. The Prize commemorates the distinguished public service career of Thomas J. Dodd, who served as Executive Trial Counsel at the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg, as U.S. Representative from 1953 to 1957 and as Connecticut’s Senator from 1959 to 1971. Thomas Dodd dedicated his entire public life to fighting against the violation and suppression of human rights in the United States and abroad.

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Crime and No Punishment? China’s Abuses Against the Uyghurs

Georgetown Journal of International Affairs

2021

The nominally autonomous region of Xinjiang, located in northwestern China, is home to about 11 million Uyghurs, a mostly Muslim Turkic ethnic group making up about 45 percent of the region’s population. In recent years, the Chinese government has escalated its repression of Uyghurs, alleging that these communities hold extremist and separatist views. Since 2017, numerous reports have emerged, stating that more than one million Uyghurs, as well as members from other Muslim minority groups in Xinjiang, have been forcibly transferred to “re-education camps” and subjected to arbitrary detention, forced birth control and sterilization, religious restrictions, sexual abuse, torture, family separation, and forced labor, among other abuses.

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Dr James Waller: British government's proposed Troubles amnesty is spectacularly misguided

The Irish News

2021-08-16

To remember is not to forget. And, in Northern Ireland, as I found during my time in 2017 as an honorary visiting research professor at the Mitchell Institute at Queen’s University Belfast, you remember very well.

In fact, things are never forgotten because they are always being remembered – in landscapes and soundscapes, murals and memorials, commemorations and parades, songs and poetry, neighborhoods and rituals, food and humor, sport and folklore, and in the everyday rhythm of life.

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