A holistic analysis of the implication of businesses in genocides that combines historical evidence with tentative theorization is so far unavailable. This paper aims to contribute to start to fill this gap and, ultimately, to start a process of preventive learning concerning private sector involvement in genocides. Based on a literature review, the paper identifies four main roles – victim, preventer, direct accomplice and indirect accomplice – and three main motivations – profit maximization, economic survival and institutional pragmatism – concerning corporate complicity in genocides. Subsequently, the paper explores the concrete roles that companies played in three of the most uncontested cases of corporate complicity in genocide: the J...
In the past one hundred years, there has been an ongoing mission of the civilized world to prevent t...
Social scientists have been involved in systematic research on genocide for over forty years, yet an...
Why do genocides occur? This paper applies qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) to revisit this qu...
ABSTRACT Business in Genocide: Understanding and Avoiding Complicity * Genocides and mass atrocities...
Genocide studies considers the accountability various of perpetrators, as well as the needs mass atr...
While political and military leaders are generally seen as the most responsible perpetrators, corpor...
It is my position that those wishing to prevent genocide are not the only ones studying it. A clear ...
Corporate complicity in international crimes is a largely neglected phenomenon that exists on the bo...
Corporate complicity in international crimes is a largely neglected phenomenon that exists on the bo...
States that experience genocide often have powerful external patrons, but the constraining or enabli...
open access articleThe authors argue that genocide is not a phenomenon marginal to the world of mana...
Focusing on the relationship between the micro level of perpetrator motivation and the macro level n...
This Comment examines whether social media companies risk international criminal liability when they...
The purpose of this research is to evaluate the United Nations’ process of investigating potential c...
Genocide is a modern term whereby groups of people are killed on the basis of their religion, race, ...
In the past one hundred years, there has been an ongoing mission of the civilized world to prevent t...
Social scientists have been involved in systematic research on genocide for over forty years, yet an...
Why do genocides occur? This paper applies qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) to revisit this qu...
ABSTRACT Business in Genocide: Understanding and Avoiding Complicity * Genocides and mass atrocities...
Genocide studies considers the accountability various of perpetrators, as well as the needs mass atr...
While political and military leaders are generally seen as the most responsible perpetrators, corpor...
It is my position that those wishing to prevent genocide are not the only ones studying it. A clear ...
Corporate complicity in international crimes is a largely neglected phenomenon that exists on the bo...
Corporate complicity in international crimes is a largely neglected phenomenon that exists on the bo...
States that experience genocide often have powerful external patrons, but the constraining or enabli...
open access articleThe authors argue that genocide is not a phenomenon marginal to the world of mana...
Focusing on the relationship between the micro level of perpetrator motivation and the macro level n...
This Comment examines whether social media companies risk international criminal liability when they...
The purpose of this research is to evaluate the United Nations’ process of investigating potential c...
Genocide is a modern term whereby groups of people are killed on the basis of their religion, race, ...
In the past one hundred years, there has been an ongoing mission of the civilized world to prevent t...
Social scientists have been involved in systematic research on genocide for over forty years, yet an...
Why do genocides occur? This paper applies qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) to revisit this qu...