This book is a frank and hopeful meditation on the recurring
tragedy of genocide that should be read by anybody who cares about
its prevention. Hirsch argues if we are to successfully confront,
prevent, or control the most egregious aspects of genocidal
violence, we must create containing political institutions and
social mechanisms. But ultimately human nature must change to
temper the worst excesses of genocidal violence, given its long and
intractable historical presence. Hirsch looks hard at complex
realities and proposes how to build a politics of prevention.
Focusing on the United States, a political movement must be built
that supports the politics of prevention in the international
realm. Long-term prevention depends on changing how humans view
each other, though. Creating a new ethic of life-enhancing behavior
based on the ideology of universal human rights that is passed on
from generation to generation via the process of political
socialization ultimately is our best hope of preventing future
genocides.
This book begins with the fact that there is apparently nothing
historically unique about human beings killing one another in
relatively large numbers. Genocide appears to be a phenomenon that
has been a part of human history since we began to record our worst
excesses. Certainly it has been in the forefront of human
consciousness as the last century came to its bloody conclusion. It
is not an intractable problem. A mass movement to prevent genocide
can be built, and once created it should pressure the federal
government to focus its foreign policy on the prevention of
genocide.
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