by Beth Connors-Manke
“I graduated, saw news about the war, but I was very far from it.”
This is how Assistant Professor of Philosophy Natalie Nenadic describes the beginning of her involvement in the groundbreaking lawsuit Kadic v. Karadzic, which gained recognition for sexual atrocities as acts of genocide.
The war Nenadic had seen in the news was the dissolution of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, in which Serbian forces carried out “ethnic cleansing” through a system of concentration camps for torture, mass killings, and mutilations. This campaign included mass rapes and murder of women.
Nenadic had recently received her B.A. from Stanford University when she was contacted by ethnologist and philosopher Asja