Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
1. ‘Ethnicity’: The Permeant Debate
2. The Pre-Cursor Debate
3. The Holocaust: The Comparative Debate
4. Debating Collective Guilt
5. Unresolved Allegations And The Culture Of Impunity
6. Appealling To The Past: The Debate Over History
Afterword
Bibliography
Endnotes
Index
Nigel Eltringham is a Research Associate in the Department of Anthropology and Sociology of SOAS, London. He worked for three years with a conflict resolution NGO in Rwanda before conducting doctoral research in Rwanda and among the Rwandan Diaspora in Europe. He has extensively published on post-genocide Rwanda.
I think it is going to be a very fine contribution to African Studies. It is well structured, cogently argued, erudite and most of the time well-written -- Rene Lemarchand, author of Burundi: Ethnic Conflict and Genocide - professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of Florida. The proposal certainly identifies some of the most critical issues in the discourse about the Rwandan Genocide. -- Carina Tersakian
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