Part I Definitions and Legislation; Raphael Lemkin (1947), Genocide as a crime in international law; Matthew Lippman (1998), The convention on the prevention and punishment of the crime of genocide: fifty years later; Guglielmo Verdirame (2000), The genocide definition in the jurisprudence of the ad hoc tribunals; Catherine Mackinnon (1994), Rape, genocide and women's human rights; B. Van Schaack (1997), The crime of political genocide: repairing the genocide convention's blind spot; Part II Understanding Genocide and Mass Violations of Rights; Helen Fein (1978), A formula for genocide: comparison of the Turkish genocide (1915) and the German Holocaust (1939 - 45); Benjamin Madley (2004), Patterns of frontier genocide 1803 - 1910: the Aboriginal Tasmanians, the Yuki of California, and the Herero of Namibia; William A. Schabas (2000), Hate speech in Rwanda: the road to genocide; Ervin Staub (1993), The psychology of bystanders, perpetrators, and heroic helpers; Michael Mann (2000), Were the perpetrators of genocide "ordinary men" or "real Nazis"? results from fifteen hundred biographies; Part III Preventing Genocide; Barbara Harff (2003), No lessons learned from the Holocaust? assessing risks of genocide and political mass murder since 1955; Louis Rene Beres (1988), Justice and realpolitik: international law and the prevention of genocide; Jack Donnelly (2002), Genocide and humanitarian intervention; Jonathan I. Charney (1999), Anticipatory humanitarian intervention in Kosovo; W. Michael Reisman (1996), Legal responses to genocide and other massive violations of human rights; Part IV Punishment and Reconciliation; Juan E. Mendez (1997), Accountability for past abuses; Stanley Cohen (1995), State crimes of previous regimes: knowledge, accountability, and policing of the past; David Wippman (1999 - 2000), Atrocities, deterrence and the limits of international justice; Israel W. Charny (2003), A classification of denials of the Holocaust and other genocides; John Borneman (2002), Reconciliation after ethnic cleansing: listening, retribution, affiliation.
Mark Lattimer is Executive Director of the Minority Rights Group International, UK.
Ask a Question About this Product More... |