is article seeks to explore the role that leadership plays in both the perpetration and avoidance of mass atrocities. Many scholars have argued that leadership is pivotal to the outbreak of such violence but there is almost no scholarship which explores the role that political leaders play in mitigating or aggravating the risk of atrocities over time. Why is it that mass atrocities occur in some places but not in others, despite the existence of similar risk factors? By conducting a comparative analysis of Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe and Kenneth Kaunda of Zambia, this paper investigates the impact that the strategies of each leader had on the risk of mass atrocities. Both countries share similar colonial backgrounds, and display comparable st...
Abstract Structural violence remains largely unaddressed and its invisibility means that it becomes ...
Abstract: History offers many examples of dictators who worsened their behavior significantly over t...
In November 2017, after 37 years, Robert Mugabe’s government ended in Zimbabwe. This change in power...
This article seeks to explore the role that leadership plays in both the perpetration and avoidance ...
Soon after taking power, three leaders of nonviolent African independence movements, Kwame Nkrumah o...
This paper uses Hartzell and Hoddie’s four dimensions of power-sharing to analyse the implementation...
This book offers a different approach to the structural prevention of mass atrocities. It investigat...
Published versionThis article examines the role of diplomatic relations during the first stages of t...
Zimbabwe is one of the hottest spots in the world today, not because of war or terrorism or geologic...
Rwanda under the rule of President Juvenal Habyarimana and the MRND government was a de facto totali...
Can we predict when and where violence will likely break out within cases of genocide? I present a t...
In the 1980s, two nations in Africa stood out for their development and stability in a continent bes...
This article argues that revolutionary leaders are more willing to commit mass killing than nonrevol...
The purpose of this article is to provide a better understanding of why some countries experience ma...
The purpose of this article is to provide a better understanding of why some countries experience ma...
Abstract Structural violence remains largely unaddressed and its invisibility means that it becomes ...
Abstract: History offers many examples of dictators who worsened their behavior significantly over t...
In November 2017, after 37 years, Robert Mugabe’s government ended in Zimbabwe. This change in power...
This article seeks to explore the role that leadership plays in both the perpetration and avoidance ...
Soon after taking power, three leaders of nonviolent African independence movements, Kwame Nkrumah o...
This paper uses Hartzell and Hoddie’s four dimensions of power-sharing to analyse the implementation...
This book offers a different approach to the structural prevention of mass atrocities. It investigat...
Published versionThis article examines the role of diplomatic relations during the first stages of t...
Zimbabwe is one of the hottest spots in the world today, not because of war or terrorism or geologic...
Rwanda under the rule of President Juvenal Habyarimana and the MRND government was a de facto totali...
Can we predict when and where violence will likely break out within cases of genocide? I present a t...
In the 1980s, two nations in Africa stood out for their development and stability in a continent bes...
This article argues that revolutionary leaders are more willing to commit mass killing than nonrevol...
The purpose of this article is to provide a better understanding of why some countries experience ma...
The purpose of this article is to provide a better understanding of why some countries experience ma...
Abstract Structural violence remains largely unaddressed and its invisibility means that it becomes ...
Abstract: History offers many examples of dictators who worsened their behavior significantly over t...
In November 2017, after 37 years, Robert Mugabe’s government ended in Zimbabwe. This change in power...