ABSTRACT

The Genocide Convention explores the question of whether the law and genocide law in particular can prevent mass atrocities. The volume explains how genocide came to be accepted as a legal norm and analyzes the intent required for this categorization. The work also discusses individual suits against states for genocide and, finally, explores the utility of genocide as a legal concept.

part |20 pages

Outlawing Genocide

chapter |6 pages

A Crime Without a Name

chapter |6 pages

The Contours of Genocide

chapter |6 pages

Genocide in Crime Codes

part |27 pages

Genocide's Legal Environment

part |49 pages

Genocidal Intent

chapter |4 pages

The Acts of Genocide

chapter |7 pages

Genocide by Killing

chapter |5 pages

Destroying a Group

chapter |5 pages

Instant Destruction

chapter |9 pages

Intent Without Intent

chapter |10 pages

The Motives for Genocide

chapter |7 pages

The Intent of Others

part |25 pages

The Victims of Genocide

chapter |7 pages

The Numbers Game

chapter |7 pages

Identifying a Group

chapter |5 pages

Genocide by Mistake

part |27 pages

The Scale of Genocide

chapter |7 pages

Retail Genocide

chapter |4 pages

Wholesale Genocide

chapter |6 pages

Local Genocide

part |26 pages

Techniques of Genocide

chapter |3 pages

Human Habitat

chapter |6 pages

Aerial Genocide

chapter |4 pages

Nuclear Genocide

part |50 pages

Genocide by a State

part |20 pages

Why Genocide?