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Title: | NCH Campaigns 1995–2024 | |||
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Date of publishing: | July 28, 2010 | |||
Hits: | 41306 | |||
Category: | Other content |
NCH Campaigns 1995–2024
Overview of NCH campaign results
1995-2024: click here.
Click on the [number] to download pdf:
2024
Azerbaijan: Igbal Abilov (Talysh historian and ethnographer) [1]
Tunisia: Sihem Bensedrine (truth commission president) [1]
Sierra Leone: Chernoh Alpha Bah (historian and journalist) [1]
2023
Russia: Oleg Orlov (Russian historian and Memorial co-chair) [1]
Colombia: Sergio Antonio Mosquera (Afro-Colombian historian) and Fundación Muntú Bantú [1]
2021
Russia: NGO Memorial International [1][2][3]
Serbia: Association for Social History attacked [1]
Israel: Mohammed Bakri (Palestinian filmmaker) [1]
2020
France: EuroClio statement on the murder of history teacher Samuel Paty [1]
United States: Reparations for survivors, descendants of 1921 Tulsa massacre [1]
France: Lifting access restrictions to archives [1]
China: Rahile Dawut (Uyghur historical anthropologist) [1] [2]
2019
Iran: Xiyue Wang (Chinese born American history student) [1][2][3][4][5]
Saudi Arabia: Hatoon Al-Fassi (historian and women's rights activist) [1][2][3]
2018
Guatemala: Archivo Histórico de la Policía Nacional (AHPN) [1]
2017
Russia: Yuri Dmitriev (Karelian Gulag historian) [1][2][3]
Thailand: Sulak Sivaraksa (Buddhist social critic and historian) [1]
2016
Greece: Sheila Lecoeur (British historian, lecturer in Italian) [1]
Oman: Abdullah Habib (writer, film-maker) [1][2]
Hungary: György Lukács archives [1]
Yugoslavia (former): archives of Yugoslavia Tribunal (ICTY) [1]
2015
Morocco: Maâti Monjib (historian, journalist and human rights activist) [1][2][3][4][5]
Azerbaijan: Leyla and Arif Yunus (historians, human rights activists) [1][2]
Indonesia: truth about 1965-1966 massacres [1][2]
2014
Paraguay: Nelson Aguilera (writer of historical novel for children) [1]
India: Wendy Doniger (historian of religion) [1]
2013
Turkey: Ayşe Berktay (historian) [1][2]
Azerbaijan: Akram Aylisli (novelist) [1][2]
2011
Turkey: Büşra Ersanlı (political scientist, constitutional law expert, historian) [1][2][3][4][5][6]
Azerbaijan: Jabbar Savalan (history student) [1][2]
Iran: Seyed Hossein Javdani (history lecturer) [1]
Rwanda: Agnes Uwimana & Saidati Mukakibibi (journalists) [1]
Iran: Fatemeh Masjedi (historian) and Maryam Bidgoli [1]
2010
Russia (Ingushetia): Mukhmed Gazdiev (retired history teacher) [1]
2009
Peru: Salomón Lerner Febres (former truth commission president) [1]
2008
Russia: Memorial [1]
Uzbekistan: Anonymous (historian of Central Asia/Turkestan) [1]
China / Turkey: Lü Gengsong, Shi Tao, Tohti Tunyaz, Dolma Kyab / Hrant Dink, Ragip Zarakolu [1]
Iran: Anonymous (historian of Iranian and Turkish history) [1]
2007
Haiti: Wilson Mesilien & Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine (coordinators 30 September Foundation) [1]
Iran: Mehrnoushe Solouki (filmmaker and journalism graduate student) [1][2]
Iraq: Anonymous (historian of modern period/Turkish and Ottoman history) [1]
China: Lü Gengsong(history graduate and writer) [1][2][3]
Turkey: Hrant Dink (journalist) [1][2][3]
Iraq: Five historians [1]
China: Anonymous (Uighur historian and anthropologist) [1]
2006
China: Dolma Kyab (Tibetan history teacher and writer) [1][2][3]
USA: Waskar Ari (Bolivian Aymará historian) [1]
2005
Iran: Yasub al-Din Rastgari (shi’a scholar) [1]
Peru: Luis Alberto Rueda Curimania (archaeologist) a.o. [1][2]
Turkey: Orhan Pamuk (writer) [1][2][3]
Armenia: Yektan Turkyilmaz (cultural anthropologist) [1][2]
2004
Turkey: Hakan Albayrak (journalist) [1]
Bangladesh: Humayun Azad (author of historical novel) [1]
Turkmenistan: Rakhim Esenov (author of historical novel) a.o. [1][2][3]
2003
Kuwait: Yasser al-Habib (writer) [1][2][3][4][5]
Guatemala: Fredy Peccerelli (forensic anthropologist) a.o. [1][2][3][4][5][6]
Kazakhstan: Anonymous (art historian, archaeologist) [1]
2002
Argentina: Fernanda Sanssone (archaeology student) [1]
Iran: Hashem Aghajari (historian) [1][2][3][4][5][6]
Guatemala: Forensic anthropology foundations [1][2]
China: Xu Zerong (historian) [1]
2001
Guatemala: Matilde Leonor González Izas (historian) [1]
China: Tohti Tunyaz (historian) [1][2][3]
Turkey: Emrullah Karagoz (archaeology student) [1][2][3][4]
2000
Ethiopia: Badada Bayene (history student) a.o.[1][2]
India: Anonymous (historian) [1]
Burma / Myanmar: Ma Khin Khin Leh (history teacher) a.o. [1]
China: Song Yongyi (American librarian) [1][2][3]
1999
Palestinian Authority: Abdulsittar Qassem (historian) a.o.[1][2][3][4]
Guatemala: Juan Gerardi (auxiliary archbishop) [1]
Ethiopia: Gamachu Malka Fufa (Oromo writer) a.o.[1]
1998
Mexico: Andrés Aubry (historian, anthropologist) a.o. [1]
Palestinian Authority: Wael Ali Farraj (history student) [1]
Burma / Myanmar: Ko Aung Tun, U Myo Htun (historians) [1][2][3]
Rwanda: Philomène Mukabarali (college director) [1]
1996
China: Wang Dan (history student) [1]
Albania: Elvira Shapplo (historian) a.o. [1]