The burgeoning field of genocide studies is faced with several concerns. Foremost is the challenge of finding a space for encompassing and embracing the Holocaust with some comfort. The Judeocide is an ally, not an enemy, and not on the margins. Our maturing discipline needs to find a sense of collegiality, consensus on terminology, and yardsticks with which to measure scales, dimensions, and degrees of the crime. Several other themes also need attention: wider perspectives on the prerequisites of genocide, starvation as a genocidal weapon, a clear separa- tion between motive and intent, genocide by omission, the elusive concepts of ‘‘worthy’’ and ‘‘unworthy’’ victims, the vexed question of why nations and people want or do not want to inte...
The debate about whether genocide took place on the Australian colonial frontier began more than thi...
ThiS article argues that understanding the nature of genocide in itsvarious manifestations goes to t...
‘Australia’s response [to the crisis in Darfur] has been slow, it has been hesitant, and, I regret t...
The burgeoning field of genocide studies is faced with several concerns. Foremost is the challenge o...
Despite the catch-cry bandied about after the Holocaust, "Never Again", genocides continue to destro...
Genocide isn't past tense and the Nazi and Bosnian eras are not yet closed. The demonising of people...
Despite the catch-cry bandied about after the Holocaust, "Never Again", genocides continue to destro...
The use of the term 'genocide' as a model for explaining frontier violence has generated varying deg...
Genocide confounds scholars, practitioners, and laypersons alike. Despite the carnage of the twentie...
Genocide confounds scholars, practitioners, and laypersons alike. Despite the carnage of the twentie...
From the outset, historians of genocide have seen themselves as activists. Among historians of colon...
Over the last two decades, the interdisciplinary field of genocide studies has dramatically expanded...
This book is intended as a concise introduction to a complex field with a large and fast growing sch...
This paper explores the applicability of the term genocide to Australian colonisation, and considers...
Genocide studies is simultaneously an emerging and accepted category of scholarly inquiry. The field...
The debate about whether genocide took place on the Australian colonial frontier began more than thi...
ThiS article argues that understanding the nature of genocide in itsvarious manifestations goes to t...
‘Australia’s response [to the crisis in Darfur] has been slow, it has been hesitant, and, I regret t...
The burgeoning field of genocide studies is faced with several concerns. Foremost is the challenge o...
Despite the catch-cry bandied about after the Holocaust, "Never Again", genocides continue to destro...
Genocide isn't past tense and the Nazi and Bosnian eras are not yet closed. The demonising of people...
Despite the catch-cry bandied about after the Holocaust, "Never Again", genocides continue to destro...
The use of the term 'genocide' as a model for explaining frontier violence has generated varying deg...
Genocide confounds scholars, practitioners, and laypersons alike. Despite the carnage of the twentie...
Genocide confounds scholars, practitioners, and laypersons alike. Despite the carnage of the twentie...
From the outset, historians of genocide have seen themselves as activists. Among historians of colon...
Over the last two decades, the interdisciplinary field of genocide studies has dramatically expanded...
This book is intended as a concise introduction to a complex field with a large and fast growing sch...
This paper explores the applicability of the term genocide to Australian colonisation, and considers...
Genocide studies is simultaneously an emerging and accepted category of scholarly inquiry. The field...
The debate about whether genocide took place on the Australian colonial frontier began more than thi...
ThiS article argues that understanding the nature of genocide in itsvarious manifestations goes to t...
‘Australia’s response [to the crisis in Darfur] has been slow, it has been hesitant, and, I regret t...