Two Uyghur women on a street with book title underneath; text: The War on the Uyghurs: China's Internal Campaign against a Muslim Minority by Sean Roberts

10/22/2020: The War on the Uyghurs with author Sean R. Roberts

Logos of the International Development Studies Program and the Sigur Center for Asian Studies

Thursday, October 22, 2020

2:00 PM – 3:30 PM EDT

Live book launch via WebEx

Two Uyghur women on a street with book title underneath

The Sigur Center for Asian Studies and the International Development Studies Program (IDS) at the Elliott School of International Affairs bring you this webinar book launch with Sigur affiliated faculty members: IDS Director Sean R. Roberts and moderator Eric Schluessel, Assistant Professor of modern Chinese history. Roberts’ first book, The War on the Uyghurs: China’s Internal Campaign against a Muslim Minority (Princeton University Press, September 2020), is a gripping and moving account of the humanitarian catastrophe that China does not want you to know about. In the fifth edition of the Sigur Center’s latest research initiative, New Books in Asian Studies, attendees will learn about Roberts’ own in-depth interviews with the Uyghurs, thus enabling their voices to be heard. 

Within weeks of the September 11 attacks on New York and Washington, the Chinese government warned that it faced a serious terrorist threat from its Uyghur ethnic minority, who are largely Muslim. In this explosive book, Sean Roberts reveals how China has been using the US-led global war on terror as international cover for its increasingly brutal suppression of the Uyghurs, and how the war’s targeting of an undefined enemy has emboldened states around the globe to persecute ethnic minorities and severely repress domestic opposition in the name of combatting terrorism. Of the eleven million Uyghurs living in China today, more than one million are now being held in so-called reeducation camps, victims of what has become the largest program of mass detention and surveillance in the world. Roberts argues that the reframing of Uyghur domestic dissent as international terrorism provided justification and inspiration for a systematic campaign to erase Uyghur identity, and that a nominal Uyghur militant threat only emerged after more than a decade of Chinese suppression in the name of counterterrorism—which has served to justify further state repression.

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