The Rwandan genocide has become a touchstone for debates about
the causes of mass violence and the responsibilities of the
international community. Yet a number of key questions about this
tragedy remain unanswered: How did the violence spread from
community to community and so rapidly engulf the nation? Why did
individuals make decisions that led them to take up machetes
against their neighbors? And what was the logic that drove the
campaign of extermination?
According to Scott Straus, a social scientist and former
journalist in East Africa for several years (who received a
Pulitzer Prize nomination for his reporting for the Houston
Chronicle), many of the widely held beliefs about the causes and
course of genocide in Rwanda are incomplete. They focus largely on
the actions of the ruling elite or the inaction of the
international community. Considerably less is known about how and
why elite decisions became widespread exterminatory violence.
Challenging the prevailing wisdom, Straus provides substantial
new evidence about local patterns of violence, using original
research including the most comprehensive surveys yet undertaken
among convicted perpetrators to assess competing theories about the
causes and dynamics of the genocide. Current interpretations stress
three main causes for the genocide: ethnic identity, ideology, and
mass-media indoctrination (in particular the influence of hate
radio). Straus's research does not deny the importance of
ethnicity, but he finds that it operated more as a background
condition. Instead, Straus emphasizes fear and intra-ethnic
intimidation as the primary drivers of the violence. A defensive
civil war and the assassination of a president created a feeling of
acute insecurity. Rwanda's unusually effective state was also
central, as was the country's geography and population density,
which limited the number of exit options for both victims and
perpetrators.
In conclusion, Straus steps back from the particulars of the
Rwandan genocide to offer a new, dynamic model for understanding
other instances of genocide in recent history the Holocaust,
Armenia, Cambodia, the Balkans and assessing the future likelihood
of such events."
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