Northeastern Illinois University to host 12th Annual Genocide and Human Rights in Africa and the Diaspora Conference
PR Newswire
CHICAGO, Feb. 27, 2026
Conference to feature speakers from across North America and Africa, including keynote by Mamphela Ramphele, Ph.D.
CHICAGO, Feb. 27, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Northeastern Illinois University's Genocide and Human Rights in Africa and the Diaspora (GHRAD) Center will host the 12th Annual GHRAD Conference March 2-4 on the University's Main Campus, 5500 N. St. Louis Ave. in Chicago, and via Zoom.
The conference is free and open to the public. Advance sign-up is requested to attend in person.
"The GHRAD Conference offers attendees — be it students, educators, activists or community members — the chance to learn about the atrocities that have taken place in Africa and the diaspora and empowers people to find solutions on a local and global scale," Northeastern Professor and Coordinator of Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages and Director of the GHRAD Center Jeanine Ntihirageza, Ph.D., said. "The conference theme this year is "From Remembrance to Prevention" because it was really important to the GHRAD Center that we not just talk about what happened in the past, but we examine what is happening today and how our collective actions or inactions will impact future generations."
The schedule includes panel discussions on reparations in Chicagoland, breaking the silence around genocide in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, and healing and prevention, among numerous other topics. The keynote speaker will be Mamphela Ramphele, Ph.D., a co-founder of the Black Consciousness Movement alongside Steve Biko. A pivotal figure in the struggle against apartheid in South Africa, Dr. Ramphele has served as the former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cape Town and in global development as a Managing Director of the World Bank.
"We are thrilled to welcome Dr. Mamphela Ramphele to the GHRAD Conference this year," Dr. Ntihirageza said. "Her background as an activist, educator, businesswoman and more can offer a unique perspective on how oppression can take root and what can be done to counteract it."
Northeastern is home to the only oral history archive at a university devoted to survivors of the 1972 genocide in Burundi, Africa. The collection "Mass Atrocity Testimonies — An Oral History Archive," began in 2023 and continues to grow as University students and employees travel to Burundi and speak with survivors.
"Genocides are often hidden from history," said Dr. Ntihirageza, who is a survivor of the 1972 genocide in Burundi. "When survivors are centered and given the chance to share their stories, we need to listen. It's so important to remember what has happened before so that it doesn't happen again."
This year's GHRAD Conference is part of Northeastern's College of Arts and Sciences-themed semester, "Staying the Course for Human Rights: From Awareness to Action," which centers on the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights in classes and public programs throughout Spring 2026.
About Northeastern Illinois University
Northeastern Illinois University offers more than 40 undergraduate degree and certificate programs and more than 50 graduate degree, certificate, licensure and endorsement programs. The Main Campus is located on 67 acres in an attractive residential area on the Northwest Side of Chicago. Founded in 1867, Northeastern is a Minority-Serving Institution and the longest-standing four-year public Hispanic-Serving Institution in the Midwest. The University has additional Chicagoland locations, including the Jacob H. Carruthers Center for Inner City Studies, El Centro, and the University Center of Lake County. Learn more at neiu.edu.
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SOURCE Northeastern Illinois University
