The Consortium of Higher Education Centers for Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights Studies (hereafter “Consortium”) endeavors to be the primary assembly and professional organization of center directors committed to securing, integrating, and advancing studies of Holocaust, genocide and human rights within the higher education landscape.
History
There are approximately two hundred centers dedicated to Holocaust, genocide and/or human rights studies located on the campuses of private and public universities and colleges across North America. These centers respond to the ongoing challenges of upholding rights, preventing genocide, and teaching the lessons of the Holocaust, thereby fulfilling an educational need for colleges and universities, their neighboring communities, and the world at large.
With support for such centers at risk, and the scourges of racism, xenophobia and antisemitism rising, the value that these centers add to the higher education landscape is vital. However, to survive and thrive, these centers need leadership that a formal consortium provides as well as financial, institutional and research support.
In December 2017, the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum assembled key stakeholders from these centers to foster exchange and to explore the potential for a more formal collaboration that would secure the existence of these centers and amplify their work.
This summit determined that the establishment of a formal consortium was a viable and necessary endeavor. In December 2019, at its first regular meeting at the University of Nebraska at Omaha, members officially established the Consortium of Higher Education Centers for Holocaust, Genocide, and Human Rights Studies.
Mission
The Consortium provides a formal network of diverse academic centers dedicated to advancing public and scholarly research and education on the Holocaust, genocide, and human rights. It advocates on behalf of these centers in terms of individual support and legitimacy within host academic institutions, as well as in terms of content relevance at local, regional, national, and international levels.
The Consortium facilitates and launches new networks and collaborations among specific centers that would share regional and state resources and develop projects, programs, and other defined initiatives. It helps cultivate and leverage opportunities and resources at the national level, including but not limited to financial support, professional development, curricular enhancements, job placement for students, and training the next generation of Consortium leaders.
Vision
Our vision is to secure these centers as vibrant research and educational programs, to integrate the subject areas across disciplines in the curricular and degree programs, and to support students and faculties who seek professional opportunities on and off campus as educators and activists in the fields of Holocaust, genocide and human rights studies.
Values
Higher education centers dedicated to the study of Holocaust, genocide, and human rights are vital and irreplaceable resources for the colleges, universities, and communities they serve. They contribute to public education, teaching, research, policymaking, community engagement, and advocacy. The Consortium supports the growth of Holocaust, genocide, and human rights centers, endeavors to empower them, and stands for the following values:
- Recognition of fundamental equality of all people regardless of religion, ethnicity, class, nationality, gender, sex, social status, age, or (dis)ability
- Assurance of basic human rights for all people, especially among vulnerable, marginal, threatened, or at-risk communities
- Protection from harm and injustice, systemic and otherwise, especially when hateful ideologies are promoted and discriminatory acts carried out by social agents or political systems.
- Acknowledgment and commemoration of past and present traumas suffered in genocides, atrocities, and human rights abuses
- Commitment to the integrity of free and open scholarly inquiry in higher education and in public discourse