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The MPhil in Violent Histories and Repair, to be presented by SU’s Centre for the Study of the Afterlife of Violence and the Reparative Quest (AVReQ), will be offered from 2026.
“The programme aims to educate, train and mentor emerging scholars and young researchers, empowering them to explore new terrains of investigation into the complex and enduring legacies of violent histories,” explains Prof Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela, SARChI Chair in Violent Histories and Transgenerational Trauma and Director of AVReQ.
“The programme also includes a critical examination of psychosocial processes of repair to explore new imaginaries of what it means to repair or heal violent pasts.”
She adds that the programme focusses on the scope of research on the contemporary and continuing transgenerational legacies of violent histories such as genocide, slavery, colonial-era violence and apartheid, while it will also examine reparative practices and peacebuilding approaches adopted in selected postcolonial and post-conflict contexts.
The programme responds to the growing focus in higher education on memory studies, peacebuilding practices, and decolonial studies on the enduring impact of violent histories. It consists of five compulsory modules:
Students will be required to attend lectures and seminars in person. Supervisors and students may jointly arrange the structure of supervision for the completion of the thesis in the second year of the programme.
Closing date for applications: South African students: 31 October / International students: 31 August.