Conventional understandings of genocide are rooted in the ‘Holocaust model’: intense mass killing directed at the immediate destruction of the group. Yet, such conceptions do not encompass cases of so-called “slow-motion” genocide, where the destruction of the group may occur over generations. The destruction of indigenous groups often follows such a pattern. This article examines the case of West Papua with a view to developing a new analytical model distinguishing high-intensity “hot” genocides, motivated by hate and the victims’ threatening nature, with low-intensity “cold genocides,” rooted in victims’ supposed inferiority
The atrocities that were committed in Rwanda, Bosnia and Armenia could not have been possible withou...
The violent mass killings during Mao Zedong’s reign of China in the 1950s and 1970s, as well as the ...
This paper explores the applicability of the term genocide to Australian colonisation, and considers...
Conventional understandings of genocide are rooted in the ‘Holocaust model’: intense mass killing di...
This paper examines and extends the debate on genocide in West Papua. Referring to the 1948 United N...
This paper examines and extends the debate on genocide in West Papua. Referring to the 1948 United N...
This article examines two cases of ongoing persecution in Southeast Asia and the problems of naming ...
The use of the term 'genocide' as a model for explaining frontier violence has generated varying deg...
This article discusses political genocide in postcolonial Asia, looking at Indonesia, Cambodia, and ...
ThiS article argues that understanding the nature of genocide in itsvarious manifestations goes to t...
With the withdrawal of the Dutch colonial administration from the Netherlands New Guinea in 1962, th...
Richard Chauvel responds to articles by Jim Elmslie and Stuart Upton. He states that one of the usef...
This article seeks to contribute to an emerging “ecological turn” in genocide studies that places th...
Raphael Lemkin, creator of the concept of genocide, assumed that settler colonialism was inherently ...
This article seeks, in necessarily limited ways, to shed light on a neglected area by exploring aspe...
The atrocities that were committed in Rwanda, Bosnia and Armenia could not have been possible withou...
The violent mass killings during Mao Zedong’s reign of China in the 1950s and 1970s, as well as the ...
This paper explores the applicability of the term genocide to Australian colonisation, and considers...
Conventional understandings of genocide are rooted in the ‘Holocaust model’: intense mass killing di...
This paper examines and extends the debate on genocide in West Papua. Referring to the 1948 United N...
This paper examines and extends the debate on genocide in West Papua. Referring to the 1948 United N...
This article examines two cases of ongoing persecution in Southeast Asia and the problems of naming ...
The use of the term 'genocide' as a model for explaining frontier violence has generated varying deg...
This article discusses political genocide in postcolonial Asia, looking at Indonesia, Cambodia, and ...
ThiS article argues that understanding the nature of genocide in itsvarious manifestations goes to t...
With the withdrawal of the Dutch colonial administration from the Netherlands New Guinea in 1962, th...
Richard Chauvel responds to articles by Jim Elmslie and Stuart Upton. He states that one of the usef...
This article seeks to contribute to an emerging “ecological turn” in genocide studies that places th...
Raphael Lemkin, creator of the concept of genocide, assumed that settler colonialism was inherently ...
This article seeks, in necessarily limited ways, to shed light on a neglected area by exploring aspe...
The atrocities that were committed in Rwanda, Bosnia and Armenia could not have been possible withou...
The violent mass killings during Mao Zedong’s reign of China in the 1950s and 1970s, as well as the ...
This paper explores the applicability of the term genocide to Australian colonisation, and considers...