Peter Lippman is a life-long human rights activist based in Seattle, Washington. He has spent much of the past two decades in Bosnia-Herzegovina, living there before the war and two years afterwards. Since that stay he has returned to Bosnia fifteen times and is writing a book on postwar human rights activism in the country, first visiting Kozarac in 1998. You can see some of his writings here.
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Published in: Can Europe Make It?Refugees return to Kozarac in Bosnia to rebuild community
Re-making Kozarac is about overcoming dislocation, chronicling the return and restoration of a community in Kozarac...
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Published in: HomeBosnia: blood, honey, and war's legacy
A film portrayal of the horrors of systematic rape during Bosnia's war of 1992-95 highlights the victims' suffering...
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Published in: HomeBosnia’s politics of paralysis
Bosnia’s tenth election since the end of the war of 1992-95 highlights the damaging influence of a post-war...
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Published in: HomeSrebrenica, fifteen years on
The dignified commemorations of the massacre of Bosnian Muslims in July 1995 retain their integrity and human core,...
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Published in: HomeVisegrad, memory and justice
The survivors of a terrible but neglected atrocity in a historic Bosnian town continue to campaign for remembrance...
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Published in: HomeBosnian voice, Yugoslavian memory
The sense of justice and consistency of principle of the Bosnian activist Mladen Grahovac should be a...