This chapter analyses the social psychological causes of massacres, case studies in neighbor-on-neighbor violence, possible commonalities from Rwanda and the Balkans, and social psychological evidence concerning prior contact and intergroup conflict
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Political Science, 2001.Includes bib...
1. Root Causes of Violence The present conflict in Rwanda has immediate and remote causes, which are...
In April 1994, Rwanda was submerged in a ruthless influx of composed savagery that left an expected ...
In episodes of intergroup violence, which group members participate and which do not? Although such ...
This chapter explores the dynamics of mass killings of Jews and offers some explanations for the nat...
This article addresses the role of threat in explanations of ethnic and other inter-group conflict a...
Why do presumably innocent and sane people commit mass murder during a genocide? With this question,...
Ethnic discrimination has deep roots in Rwanda. For many dozens of years, Tutsis have been marked do...
This article is about behavioral variation in genocide. Research frequently suggests that violent be...
Interest in the aftermath of genocide and mass violence has increased in the last few years, and som...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 126-134).This project is about mass murderers and the mo...
AbstractCan we predict when and where violence will likely break out within cases of genocide? I pre...
This chapter opens with an outline of historical and definitional issues in genocide and hate crime....
How do security threats mobilize social groups against each other? The strength of such threats lies...
This volume integrates data from researchers in bioarchaeology and forensic anthropology to explain ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Political Science, 2001.Includes bib...
1. Root Causes of Violence The present conflict in Rwanda has immediate and remote causes, which are...
In April 1994, Rwanda was submerged in a ruthless influx of composed savagery that left an expected ...
In episodes of intergroup violence, which group members participate and which do not? Although such ...
This chapter explores the dynamics of mass killings of Jews and offers some explanations for the nat...
This article addresses the role of threat in explanations of ethnic and other inter-group conflict a...
Why do presumably innocent and sane people commit mass murder during a genocide? With this question,...
Ethnic discrimination has deep roots in Rwanda. For many dozens of years, Tutsis have been marked do...
This article is about behavioral variation in genocide. Research frequently suggests that violent be...
Interest in the aftermath of genocide and mass violence has increased in the last few years, and som...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 126-134).This project is about mass murderers and the mo...
AbstractCan we predict when and where violence will likely break out within cases of genocide? I pre...
This chapter opens with an outline of historical and definitional issues in genocide and hate crime....
How do security threats mobilize social groups against each other? The strength of such threats lies...
This volume integrates data from researchers in bioarchaeology and forensic anthropology to explain ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Political Science, 2001.Includes bib...
1. Root Causes of Violence The present conflict in Rwanda has immediate and remote causes, which are...
In April 1994, Rwanda was submerged in a ruthless influx of composed savagery that left an expected ...