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Books > Social sciences > Warfare & defence > Other warfare & defence issues > War crimes > Genocide
Tomochic is a controversial and celebrated example of Mexican
fiction. Tomochic is the fictional narration of the 1892 military
campaign that resulted in the massacre of the small village of
Tomochic, located in the Tarahumara mountains and ordered by the
dictatorial regime of Porfirio Diaz. The work is narrated by an
eyewitness, the then second lieutenant, Heriberto Frias, and
written by him in collaboration with Joaquin Clausell, editor of
the newspaper which published it in serial form between March and
April of 1893. For a period after the series' publication, the
author chose to maintain anonymity. It was expressly this stance
which excited more public interest than any other Mexican writer of
the 19th century and which eventually led to a drawn out trial to
uncover the identity of the author and to implicate him. For,
although it is a work of fiction, the general plot of the work,
involving a confrontation between a professional army and a handful
of citizens, was too similar to the actual massacre as to not be
seen by Porfirio Diaz as a reprovement of himself and his regime.
As a piece of literature, the novel is also admired for its
incorporation of two important trends of the nineteenth
century-history as literature and the war novel.
This book situates Burundi in the current global debate on ethnicity by describing and analyzing the wholesale massacre of the Hutu majority by the Tutsi minority. The author refutes the government's version of these events that places blame on the former colonial government and the church. He offers documentation that identifies the source of these massacres as occurring across a socially constructed fault-line that pitted the Hutu majority's use of ethnicity as an instrument for the achievement of majority rule in parliament against the Tutsi minority's use of ethnocide to gain hegemony. By analyzing the roots of ethnicity conflict, the author derives institutional and other formulae through which conflict among the primary groups in Burundi--and elsewhere--may be mitigated. Published in cooperation with the United Nations Research Institute for Social Development (UNRISD).
Focusing on the twentieth century, this collection of essays by leading international experts offers an up-to-date, comprehensive history and analysis of multiple cases of genocide and genocidal acts. The book contains studies of the Armenian genocide; the victims of Stalinist terror; the Holocaust; and Imperial Japan. Contributors explore colonialism and address the fate of the indigenous peoples in Africa, North America, and Australia. In addition, extensive coverage of the post-1945 period includes the atrocities in the former Yugoslavia, Bali, Cambodia, prhiopia, Rwanda, East Timor, and Guatemala. Robert Gellately is Professor and Strassler Family Chair for the Study of Holocaust History at Clark University, where he teaches a variety of courses in modern German history, modern European history and the history of the Holocaust with a concentration on the study of Nazi Germany and the Gestapo. In Backing Hitler (Oxford, 2001), Gellately uses new evidence to demolish long-held beliefs about what ordinary Germans knew of the concentration camps. His internationally acclaimed book, The Gestapo and German Society (Oxford, 1990) challenges conventional concepts of the Gestapo and daily life in Nazi Germany. He has won numerous fellowships, and awards, most recently from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation in Germany. Ben Kiernan is A. Whitney Griswold Professor of History and Director of the Genocide Studies Program at Yale University and Convenor of the Yale East Timor Project. Kiernan is the author of The Pol Pot Regime (Yale, 1996), How Pol Pot Came to Power (Verso Books, 1985) and three other works and over a hundred scholarly articles on Southeast Asia and the history of genocide. Choice called him "the most knowledgeable observer of Cambodia anywhere in the Western world." Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge "indicted" and then "sentenced" him as an "arch war criminal." Kiernan is a member of the Editorial Boards of Human Rights Review, the Journal of Human Rights, and the Journal of Genocide Research. He is currently writing a global history of genocide since 1500.
This book tells the story of German nurses who, directly or
indirectly, participated in the Nazis' "euthanasia" measures
against patients with mental and physical disabilities, measures
that claimed well over 100,000 victims from 1939 to 1945. How could
men and women who were trained to care for their patients come to
kill or assist in murder or mistreatment? This is the central
question pursued by Bronwyn McFarland-Icke as she details the lives
of nurses from the beginning of the Weimar Republic through the
years of National Socialist rule. Rather than examine what the
Party did or did not order, she looks into the hearts and minds of
people whose complicity in murder is not easily explained with
reference to ideological enthusiasm. Her book is a micro-history in
which many of the most important ethical, social, and cultural
issues at the core of Nazi genocide can be addressed from a fresh
perspective.
McFarland-Icke offers gripping descriptions of the conditions
and practices associated with psychiatric nursing during these
years by mining such sources as nursing guides, personnel records,
and postwar trial testimony. Nurses were expected to be
conscientious and friendly caretakers despite job stress, low
morale, and Nazi propaganda about patients' having "lives unworthy
of living." While some managed to cope with this situation, others
became abusive. Asylum administrators meanwhile encouraged nurses
to perform with as little disruption and personal commentary as
possible. So how did nurses react when ordered to participate in,
or tolerate, the murder of their patients? Records suggest that
some had no conflicts of conscience; others did as they were told
with regret; and a few refused. The remarkable accounts of these
nurses enable the author to re-create the drama taking place while
sharpening her argument concerning the ability and the willingness
to choose.
Listen to a short interview with James Dawes Host: Chris Gondek ]
Producer: Heron & Crane
After the worst thing in the world happens, then what? What is
left to the survivors, the witnesses, those who tried to help? What
can we do to prevent more atrocities from happening in the future,
and to stop the ones that are happening right now? "That the World
May Know" tells the powerful and moving story of the successes and
failures of the modern human rights movement. Drawing on firsthand
accounts from fieldworkers around the world, the book gives a
painfully clear picture of the human cost of confronting inhumanity
in our day.
There is no dearth of such stories to tell, and James Dawes
begins with those that emerged from the Rwandan genocide. Who, he
asks, has the right to speak for the survivors and the dead, and
how far does that right go? How are these stories used, and what
does this tell us about our collective moral future? His inquiry
takes us to a range of crises met by a broad array of human rights
and humanitarian organizations. Here we see from inside the
terrible stresses of human rights work, along with its curious
seductions, and the myriad paradoxes and quandaries it
presents.
With pathos, compassion, and a rare literary grace, this book
interweaves personal stories, intellectual and political questions,
art and aesthetics, and actual "news" to give us a compelling
picture of humanity at its conflicted best, face-to-face with
humanity at its worst.
Winner of the 1993 Fraenkel Prize in Contemporary History, The Nazi Connection shows how the Nazis drew upon American eugenic thought, scientific research, and widespread sterilization laws to install their program of eugenics after 1933.
How did typhus come to be viewed as a "Jewish disease" and what was the connection between the anti-typhus measures during the First World War and the Nazi gas chambers and other genocidal medical practices in the Second World War? This powerful book provides valuable new insight into the history of German medicine in its reaction to the international fight against typhus and the perceived threat of epidemics from the East in the early part of the twentieth century. Professor Weindling examines how German bacteriology became increasingly racialised, and how it sought to eradicate the disease by eradication of the perceived carriers. Delousing became a key feature of Nazi preventive medicine during the Holocaust, and gassing a favoured means of eradication of typhus.
Within days of Madeleine Albright's confirmation as U.S.
ambassador to the United Nations in 1993, she instructed David
Scheffer to spearhead the historic mission to create a war crimes
tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. As senior adviser to Albright
and then as President Clinton's ambassador-at-large for war crimes
issues, Scheffer was at the forefront of the efforts that led to
criminal tribunals for the Balkans, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, and
Cambodia, and that resulted in the creation of the permanent
International Criminal Court. "All the Missing Souls" is Scheffer's
gripping insider's account of the international gamble to prosecute
those responsible for genocide, war crimes, and crimes against
humanity, and to redress some of the bloodiest human rights
atrocities in our time.
Scheffer reveals the truth behind Washington's failures during
the 1994 Rwandan genocide and the 1995 Srebrenica massacre, the
anemic hunt for notorious war criminals, how American
exceptionalism undercut his diplomacy, and the perilous quests for
accountability in Kosovo and Cambodia. He takes readers from the
killing fields of Sierra Leone to the political back rooms of the
U.N. Security Council, providing candid portraits of major figures
such as Madeleine Albright, Anthony Lake, Richard Goldstone, Louise
Arbour, Samuel "Sandy" Berger, Richard Holbrooke, and Wesley Clark,
among others.
A stirring personal account of an important historical chapter,
"All the Missing Souls" provides new insights into the continuing
struggle for international justice.
A rare and poignant testimony of a survivor of the Armenian
genocide. The twentieth century was an era of genocide, which
started with the Turkish destruction of more than one million
Armenian men, women, and children-a modern process of total,
violent erasure that began in 1895 and exploded under the cover of
the First World War. John Minassian lived through this as a
teenager, witnessing the murder of his own kin, concealing his
identity as an orphan and laborer in Syria, and eventually
immigrating to the United States to start his life anew. A rare
testimony of a survivor of the Armenian genocide, one of just a
handful of accounts in English, Minassian's memoir is breathtaking
in its vivid portraits of Armenian life and culture and poignant in
its sensitive recollections of the many people who harmed and
helped him. As well as a searing testimony, his memoir documents
the wartime policies and behavior of Ottoman officials and their
collaborators; the roles played by the British, French, and Indian
armies, as well as American missionaries; and the ultimate collapse
of the empire. The author's journey, and his powerful story of
perseverance, despair, and survival will resonate with readers
today.
An estimated one million Armenians were killed in the dying days of
the Ottoman Empire in 1915. Against the backdrop of World War I,
reports of massacre, atrocity, genocide and exile sparked the
largest global humanitarian response up to that date. Britain and
its empire - the most powerful internationalist institutional force
at the time - played a key role in determining the global response
to these events. This book considers the first attempt to intervene
on behalf of the victims of the massacres and to prosecute those
responsible for 'crimes against humanity' using newly uncovered
archival material. It looks at those who attempted to stop the
violence and to prosecute the Ottoman perpetrators of the
atrocities. In the process it explores why the Armenian question
emerged as one of the most popular humanitarian causes in British
society, capturing the imagination of philanthropists, politicians
and the press. For liberals, it was seen as the embodiment of the
humanitarian ideals espoused by their former leader (and four-time
Prime Minister), W.E. Gladstone. For conservatives, as articulated
most clearly by Winston Churchill, it proved a test case for
British imperial power. In looking at the British response to the
events in Anatolia, Michelle Tusan provides a new perspective on
the genocide and sheds light on one of the first ever international
humanitarian campaigns.
This document collection highlights the legal challenges,
historical preconceptions, and political undercurrents that had
informed the UN Genocide Convention, its form, contents,
interpretation, and application. Featuring 436 documents from
thirteen repositories in the United States, the United Kingdom, and
Russia, the collection is an essential resource for students and
scholars working in the field of comparative genocide studies. The
selected records span the Cold War period and reflect on specific
issues relevant to the Genocide Convention, as established at the
time by the parties concerned. The types of documents reproduced in
the collection include interoffice correspondence, memorandums,
whitepapers, guidelines for national delegations, commissioned
reports, draft letters, telegrams, meeting minutes, official and
unofficial inquiries, formal statements, and newspaper and journal
articles. On a classification curve, the featured records range
from unrestricted to top secret. Taken in the aggregate, the
documents reproduced in this collection suggest primacy of politics
over humanitarian and/or legal considerations in the UN Genocide
Convention.
How can human beings kill or brutalize multitudes of other human beings? Focusing particularly on genocide, but also on other forms of mass killing, torture, and war, Ervin Staub explores the psychological, cultural, and societal roots of group aggression. He sketches a conceptual framework for the many influences on one group's desire to harm another: cultural and social patterns predisposing to violence, historical circumstances resulting in persistent life problems, and needs and modes of adaptation arising from the interaction of these influences. Such notions as cultural stereotyping and devaluation, societal self-concept, moral exclusion, the need for connection, authority orientation, personal and group goals, "better world" ideologies, justification, and moral equilibrium find a place in his analysis, and he addresses the relevant evidence from the behavioral sciences. Within this conceptual framework, Staub then considers the behavior of perpetrators and bystanders in four historical situations: the Holocaust (his primary example), the genocide of Armenians in Turkey, the "autogenocide" in Cambodia, and the "disappearances" in Argentina. Throughout, he is concerned with the roots of caring and the psychology of heroic helpers. In his concluding chapters, he reflects on the socialization of children at home and in schools, and on the societal practices and processes that facilitate the development of caring persons, and of care and cooperation among groups. A wide audience will find The Roots of Evil thought-provoking reading.
From Hope to Horror: Diplomacy and the Making of the Rwanda
Genocide examines Joyce E. Leader's time in the struggling state of
Rwanda during the early 1990s, documenting the challenges and
troubling disruptions that the transitioning society faced,
including violence as prospective changes unleashed deep-seated
social cleavages. As diplomat at the United States embassy in
Kigali, Leader depicts her firsthand account of Rwanda's descent
from the prospect of democracy and peace into horrific genocide.
From a field perspective, From Hope to Horror follows the political
quest to maintain or gain power that ultimately unleashed a
three-way struggle leading to deep geographic and ethnic divisions
in Rwandan society. Political wrangling played out against a
background of ever-escalating violence while U.S diplomacy pushed
for a democracy and peace without realizing its own contribution to
the violent backlash from those whose power and privilege would be
diminished due to U.S policies if this democracy was reached.
Violence escalated with each step forward in either democracy or
peacemaking until genocide enveloped the country, ending in the
brutal slaughter and traumatizing of millions. Leader explores the
ways in which the United States ultimately failed Rwanda by
neglecting the unintended consequences of its policies in support
of democratization and peacemaking. While Part 1 of From Hope to
Horror documents the unfolding of pre-genocide Rwanda, Part 2 marks
lessons learned that diplomacy must take under consideration to be
more effective at preventing, mitigating, and managing conflicts to
avert genocide. This firsthand account of the political dynamics
inside Rwanda before the genocide will not only fill a gap in the
literature but will also contribute to a dialogue among diplomats
and students of genocide and conflict resolution about U.S. policy
in transitioning societies and the importance of making conflict
prevention a diplomatic and foreign policy priority.
In the aftermath of the 1992-1995 Bosnian war, the discovery of
unmarked mass graves revealed Europe's worst atrocity since World
War II: the genocide in the UN "safe area" of Srebrenica. "To Know
Where He Lies" provides a powerful account of the innovative
genetic technology developed to identify the eight thousand Bosnian
Muslim (Bosniak) men and boys found in those graves and elsewhere,
demonstrating how memory, imagination, and science come together to
recover identities lost to genocide. Sarah E. Wagner explores
technology's import across several areas of postwar Bosnian society
- for families of the missing, the Srebrenica community, the
Bosnian political leadership (including Serb and Muslim), and
international aims of social repair - probing the meaning of
absence itself.
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