
Welcome
Founded in 2014, the Center is dedicated to advancing innovative interdisciplinary research on genocide and mass violence, focusing on transforming the way we understand the origins, dynamics, and consequences of mass violence, as well as the conditions and dimensions of resistance. The Center’s unique academic program, including a competitive international research fellowship program, interdisciplinary international conferences, and other research opportunities and events, attracts scholars at all levels, from all over the world and from a multitude of disciplines.
Watch Center Lectures
The Center organizes a vibrant event series with talks by scholars at all academic levels and from a variety of disciplines.
Preserving History: Armenian Voices from the Classroom to the Archive – Richard Hovannisian & others
Holocaust in Poland: New Research, New Findings – Jan Grabowski
Redress for Linguistic Genocide in Canada – Lorena Sekwan Fontaine
Locusts of Power: Borders, Empire, and Environment in the Modern Middle East
October 3, 2023 at 5:00 PM Pacific Time
Doheny Memorial Library, Room 240
(Join us in person)
Public lecture by Samuel Dolbee (Assistant Professor of History and D Family Dean’s Faculty Fellow in Studies of the Middle East, Vanderbilt University)
Organized by the USC Van Hunnick Department of History
Cosponsored by the USC Dornsife Center for Advanced Genocide Research and USC Dornsife Center on Science, Technology, and Public Life

Center News
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Stay informed about the Center’s work, including future lectures, conferences, and upcoming fellowship opportunities.
Blogs by Center scholars
Advancing new areas of interdisciplinary research
Latest Blogs
Reflections on Resistance and Roots of Research from 2022-2023 Greenberg Research Fellow Raíssa Alonso
Brazil has had a complicated political past. When you learn about the crimes of the military dictatorship (1964-1986), it’s striking how recently it ended. In my case, five years before I was born. My father was briefly part of a resistance movement when he was in his 20s, and we had relatives in both my mother and my father’s family who were persecuted, arrested, and tortured. When I was in college I actually got to read some of their files from the political police archives. And I always thought to myself: what would I have done if I were in their place?
Presence and Possibilities of Play?
Brazil has had a complicated political past. When you learn about the crimes of the military dictatorship (1964-1986), it’s striking how recently it ended. In my case, five years before I was born. My father was briefly part of a resistance movement when he was in his 20s, and we had relatives in both my mother and my father’s family who were persecuted, arrested, and tortured. When I was in college I actually got to read some of their files from the political police archives. And I always thought to myself: what would I have done if I were in their place?
Donate to the Center for Advanced Genocide Research
Donate to support the Center’s work
By the numbers (April 25, 2014 – April 25, 2023)
63
Academic Disciplines
90
Research and Teaching Fellows
89
Lectures and Screenings
26
Countries
12
International Conferences and Research Workshops
75
Institutional Partners
Donate documentation to USC Special Collections
Please consider donating private papers, documents, photographs or films regarding the Holocaust and other genocides. The Center works with USC Libraries Special Collections to preserve private collections and make them accessible for academic research worldwide and student investigation at USC.

Land Acknowledgement
The USC Dornsife Center for Advanced Genocide Research acknowledges our presence on the ancestral and unceded territory of the Tongva people and Kizh Nation and their neighbors: (from North to South) the Chumash, Tataviam, Kitanemuk, Serrano, Cahuilla, Payomkawichum, Acjachemen, Ipai-Tipai, Kumeyaay, and Quechan peoples, whose ancestors ruled the region we now call Southern California for at least 9,000 years. Indigenous stewardship and rightful claims to these lands have never been voluntarily relinquished nor legally extinguished. We pay respects to the members and elders of these communities, past and present, who remain caretakers and advocates of these lands, river systems, and the waters and islands of the Santa Barbara Channel. Read a more detailed land acknowledgement authored by the USC Van Hunnick History department here.
Learn more about the Center
Contact Us
Mailing Address
USC Dornsife Center for Advanced Genocide Research
650 West 35th Street, Suite 403
Mail Code 2571
Los Angeles, CA 90089