This chapter identifies two simultaneous First World War military crises, the one Ottoman, the other Russian, with major consequences in the way post-war nation-states began “seeing” minorities and resorting to genocidal action against them. Russian Jews and Ottoman Armenians were largely held responsible for the near-military disasters of 1915 in each case leading to mass communal deportations. While genocide was avoided in the former case, realised in the latter, both sequences acted as “military” models for how “new” states might eliminate unwanted groups through ethnic cleansing. While an alarmed international community responded with a 1919 commitment to minorities’ protection this same community’s imprimatur to mass compulsory populat...
The First World War caused a massive population displacement that involved approximately 6 m...
Mobilising for genocide recognition has been central for sustaining the Armenian diaspora for over a...
World War I was the first conflict during which a complex system of measures against enemy civilian...
During the phases of mobile warfare, the ethnically and religiously very heterogeneous population in...
grantor: University of TorontoWorld War I and its immediate aftermath in Eastern Galicia ...
This book examines the particular experience of ethnic, religious and national minorities who partic...
World War I and its immediate aftermath in Eastern Galicia witnessed the most brutal persecution of ...
This dissertation compares the impact of the genocides of World War I and II on the ethnic and natio...
This paper looks at ethnic cleansing as a geopolitical strategy of the Russian and Ottoman Empires a...
According to publications and statements by the Turkish government, the question of genocide in the ...
The persistence of genocide or near-genocidal incidents from the 1890s through the 1990s, committed ...
This article examines the fate of minorities in the immediate aftermath of the Great War. It outline...
This study analyzes a case study of genocide that occurred in the summer of 1915 in the province of ...
No abstractThis essay explores the interconnected issues of demobilization and brutalization in the ...
The eastern Anatolian provinces of the Ottoman Empire witnessed a great wave of anti-Armenian riots ...
The First World War caused a massive population displacement that involved approximately 6 m...
Mobilising for genocide recognition has been central for sustaining the Armenian diaspora for over a...
World War I was the first conflict during which a complex system of measures against enemy civilian...
During the phases of mobile warfare, the ethnically and religiously very heterogeneous population in...
grantor: University of TorontoWorld War I and its immediate aftermath in Eastern Galicia ...
This book examines the particular experience of ethnic, religious and national minorities who partic...
World War I and its immediate aftermath in Eastern Galicia witnessed the most brutal persecution of ...
This dissertation compares the impact of the genocides of World War I and II on the ethnic and natio...
This paper looks at ethnic cleansing as a geopolitical strategy of the Russian and Ottoman Empires a...
According to publications and statements by the Turkish government, the question of genocide in the ...
The persistence of genocide or near-genocidal incidents from the 1890s through the 1990s, committed ...
This article examines the fate of minorities in the immediate aftermath of the Great War. It outline...
This study analyzes a case study of genocide that occurred in the summer of 1915 in the province of ...
No abstractThis essay explores the interconnected issues of demobilization and brutalization in the ...
The eastern Anatolian provinces of the Ottoman Empire witnessed a great wave of anti-Armenian riots ...
The First World War caused a massive population displacement that involved approximately 6 m...
Mobilising for genocide recognition has been central for sustaining the Armenian diaspora for over a...
World War I was the first conflict during which a complex system of measures against enemy civilian...