Genocide and international relations changing patterns in the transitions of the late modern world
'Genocide and International Relations' lays the foundations for a new perspective on genocide in the modern world. Genocide studies have been influenced, negatively as well as positively, by the political and cultural context in which the field has developed. In particular, a narrow vision...
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| Format: | Book |
| Language: | English |
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Cambridge, UK
Cambridge University Press
2013
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Table of Contents:
- Part I. Perspectives
- 1. Emancipating genocide research
- 2. Fallacies of the comparative genocide paradigm
- 3. World-historical perspectives: international and colonial
- Part II. Twentieth-Century Genocide
- 4. European genocide: inter-imperial crisis and world war
- 5. The 1948 Convention and the transition in genocide
- 6. Cold War, decolonization and post-colonial genocide
- 7. The end of the Cold War and genocide
- Part III. New Patterns of Genocide
- 8. Genocide in political and armed conflict: theoretical issues
- 9. Genocide in twenty-first-century regional and global relations
- 10. Conclusions: history and future of genocide


