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Genocide and Human Rights Research in Africa and the Diaspora (GHRAD) Center

Who We Are

The GHRAD Center consists of a group of concerned faculty and students supported by a larger community of friends, together promoting awareness and acting toward the prevention of genocide and other crimes against humanity in Africa.

Jeanine Ntihirageza holds a PhD in Linguistics from the University of Chicago, with a specialization in Bantu languages. She has an MA in Applied Linguistics from Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.  She received her BA in English Language and Literature from the University of Burundi where she subsequently taught TEFL and EFL classes as a Lecturer.  She came to the United States on a Fulbright Scholarship to do her graduate studies.  Her current research interests are in Linguistics and Genocide in Africa and the African Diaspora.    In addition, she is currently working on an online bilingual Kirundi-English dictionary with Teddy Bofman and Paul Prez.

She is an Associate Professor at Northeastern Illinois University and Department Chair of Anthropology, English Language Program (ELP), Philosophy, and Teaching English as a Second/Foreign Language (TESL).  She is also on the core faculty of the African and African American Studies program.  (j-ntihirageza@neiu.edu )

Cris Toffolo is Professor and Chair of Justice Studies at Northeastern Illinois University. Her publications include: The Arab League, Chelsea House, 2008, and Emancipating Cultural Pluralism, ed., SUNY, 2003. Cris has developed, evaluated, and taught in study abroad programs in Guatemala, Ghana, Bangladesh and Northern Ireland. While on sabbatical in South Africa (2005-06) she was a Senior Researcher at CARRAS, a human rights NGO for which she conducted research on anti-racism training programs and economic policy. She is co-chair of the board of the Peace and Justice Studies Association (PJSA), and previously she chaired the board of the Higher Education Consortium for Urban Affairs (HECUA).

 From 1991-2011 she served as Amnesty International (USA)’s Pakistan Country Specialist, and she now serves on the Priorities Subcommittee of the Board of AIUSA. Her areas of research & teaching include human rights, conflict resolution, peace education, theories of justice, social movements, and the politics of the Global South. She received a Ph.D. and MA from the University of Notre Dame; an MA from George Washington University; and a BS from Alma College, cum laude.

Spring 2026 was the 12th annual conference on on Genocide and Human Rights in Africa and the Diaspora

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