Historical Case Studies
Explore three detailed case studies that demonstrate how ethnic cleansing operates across different time periods, geographic contexts, and political systems.
Jacksonian Indian Removal (1830s)
U.S. federal and state governments forced removal of Cherokee, Creek, Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Seminole nations from southeastern United States, resulting in thousands of deaths.
Jewish Displacement from Arab Countries (1948–1970s)
Approximately 850,000 Jews forced to leave homes across the Middle East and North Africa, ending over 2,500 years of Jewish presence in the Arab world.
View full case study with embedded lecture notes →Yugoslav Wars (1992–1995)
Where the term "ethnic cleansing" was coined. Examines the systematic campaign in Bosnia, including the Srebrenica massacre—the worst atrocity in Europe since WWII.
View full case study with embedded lecture notes →Geographic Distribution
Interactive Map Coming Soon
Explore the geographic distribution of these case studies across
Europe, North America, Middle East, and North Africa.
Historical Timeline
Interactive Timeline Coming Soon
View these cases chronologically from the 1830s through the 1990s,
showing how ethnic cleansing patterns evolved across time.