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  1. Anthony Dirk Moses (born 1967) is an Australian scholar who researches various aspects of genocide. In 2022 he became the Anne and Bernard Spitzer Professor of Political Science at the City College of New York , after having been the Frank Porter Graham Distinguished Professor of Global Human Rights History at the University of North Carolina ...

    • The Forty-fivers (2000)
  2. A. Dirk Moses is the Anne and Bernard Spitzer Professor of International Relations at the City College. of New York, CUNY. Raised in Brisbane, Australia, he was educated at the Universities of Queensland (B.A. 1987), St. Andrews (M.Phil. 1990), Notre Dame (M.A. 1994), and California, Berkeley (Ph.D. 2000). Before coming to City College, he was ...

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  4. Profile. Dirk Moses is the Anne and Bernard Spitzer Professor of Political Science. He researches different aspect of genocide. Before coming to City, he was the Frank Porter Graham Distinguished Professor of Global Human Rights History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

  5. Nov 14, 2023 · A. Dirk Moses is Anne and Bernard Spitzer Professor of International Relations at CCNY, editor of the Journal of Genocide Research, and author of The Problems of Genocide: Permanent Security and the Language of Transgression.

  6. Sep 28, 2023 · In other words, this integrated scholarly-political-legal treatise and frontal attack on the ‘genocide paradigm’ ought to mean that defenders of it will be forced to consider what may be salvaged from their edifice. Dirk Moses could hardly have raised the intellectual and political stakes higher. *

  7. Anthony Dirk Moses (born 1967) is an Australian scholar who researches various aspects of genocide. In 2022 he became the Anne and Bernard Spitzer Professor of Political Science at the City College of New York, after having been the Frank Porter Graham Distinguished Professor of Global Human Rights History at the University of North Carolina at ...

  8. May 10, 2022 · Moses identifies the false dichotomy between apolitical genocidal violence motivated by ethnic or racial hatred and political violence caused by security concerns as the matrix of the Problems. In a sense, he reveals the prevailing binary formula we use to make sense of annihilating violence.