Caroline BennettCaroline Bennett is a socio-cultural anthropologist, whose research addresses issues of conflict and violence, with specific attention to mass graves, mass death, genocide, and the politics of the dead. In her research she interrogates the efficacy o geopolitical interventions and universalist assumptions related to trauma, healing, justice, and wider human rights discourses on conflict and disaster. She also has research interests in ethnographic methods, and visual ethnography. Her current research examines mass graves from the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia in relation to contemporary politics and the state. Caroline is currently a lecturer in Cultural Anthropology at Victoria University of Wellington. Prior to completing her PhD in social anthropology at the University of Kent, UK, Caroline spent time working as a forensic anthropologist in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Iraq. She is a research associate with the Dynamics of Religion in Southeast Asia network hosted by the University of Göttingen, Germany. Her dissertation research was supported by the Economic Social Research Council (grant number ES/J500148/1), and a SUPRA Scholarship from the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Read More Read Less
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