Comparing the Wars of Decolonization. Counterinsurgency and Extreme Violence, 1945-1962
The project’s main question will be what structural comparative research teaches us about forms and scale of, the motives for and the conditions conducive to the use of (extreme) violence by Dutch security forces during their attempt to re-establish authority during the Indonesian struggle for Independence (1945-1949).
Project Description
The violent Dutch response to the Indonesian struggle for independence (1945-1949) has been seriously underrepresented in the international historical debate on the wars of decolonization. Compounding this neglect, historians have neglected a systematic comparison of (extreme forms of) colonial violence by the various imperial powers. Triggered by revelations of the structural nature of Dutch atrocities, this project seeks to address this hiatus in order to structurally improve our understanding of the scale and forms of, motives for, and the conditions conducive to the extreme use of violence used during the counter-insurgency campaigns in Indonesia, Algeria, French-Indochina and the various British colonies.
Selected Publications
- Cleo’s ‘unfinished business’: coming to terms with Dutch war crimes in Indonesia’s war of independence
Journal of Genocide Research – November/September 2012
- Liefde in tijden van oorlog – onze jongens en hun verzwegen kinderen in de oost – with Annegriet Wietsma
Amsterdam, uitgeverij Boom, 2013
- The Perfect Data-Marriage: Transitional Justice Research and Oral History Life Stories, with Mina Rauschenberg
Transitional Justice Review – March 2016