GSP Publications

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Letting Sudan Get Away with Murder

Ben Kiernan
Case Study(ies):
Sudan
Publication Type: Other

Over 200,000 people have died in the violence in Sudan’s Darfur provinces. And as the bloodshed continues, genocide scholar Ben Kiernan writes, members of the international community – who may actually have the influence to halt the killings and prosecute the perpetrators – have been preoccupied with semantic and jurisdictional wrangling. Kiernan provides an historical background to the legal definition of “genocide,” noting that the concept pre-dated the term. He writes, “After a century of genocide, resistance, and research on the phenomenon, the world community has a legal definition, an international statute outlawing the crime, and a court asserting jurisdiction over it,” And now, in order to halt the massacres in Sudan, punish those responsible, deter such crimes elsewhere, Kiernan concludes that the next step must be for the International Criminal Court to hear the Darfur case. – YaleGlobal

Lost and Found

My Khanh Ngo
Case Study(ies):
Cambodian Genocide
Publication Type: News Article

Yale Globalist 8:4 (summer 2008), p. 9.

Memory and Sovereignty in Post-1979 Cambodia: Choeung Ek and Local Genocide Memorials

Genocide Studies Program Working Paper No. 26

Rachel Hughes
Case Study(ies):
Cambodian Genocide
Publication Type: Working Paper
Pakistan: Cost of a Genocide Ignored

Ben Kiernan
Case Study(ies):
Other
Publication Type: Review

Australian Literary Review, Dec. 5, 2007

PBS Interview with Ben Kiernan

Ben Kiernan
Case Study(ies):
Cambodian Genocide
Theme(s):
Truth Commissions
Publication Type: News Article
Peasant Ideology and Genocide in Rwanda Under Habyarimana

GSP Working Paper No. 19

Philip Verwimp
Case Study(ies):
Rwandan Genocide
Publication Type: Working Paper
Prosecuting Genocide in Cambodia: The Winding Path Towards Justice

Susan E. Cook
Case Study(ies):
Cambodian Genocide
Theme(s):
Justice & Prosecutions
Publication Type: News Article
Psychoanaylsis and Genocide: Two Essays

GSP Working Paper No. 20/21

Dori Laub, MD
Case Study(ies):
Other
Theme(s):
Genocide, general
Publication Type: Working Paper
Putting the Khmer Rouge on Trial

Susan Cook and George Chigas
Case Study(ies):
Cambodian Genocide
Theme(s):
Justice & Prosecutions
Publication Type: News Article
Racial Discrimination in the Cambodian Genocide

Genocide Studies Program Working Paper No. 34

Duong, Liai
Case Study(ies):
Cambodian Genocide
Publication Type: Working Paper

Among the nearly two million people who perished during the Cambodian genocide, were members of Cambodia’s ethnic minorities.  In other instances of genocide, it is clear that those in power performed horrific acts of racial discrimination against minority groups.  During the Holocaust, for example, Nazi antisemitism resulted in the German government’s implementation of discriminatory policies, which targeted millions of Jews for execution.  In comparison to the Holocaust, it is more difficult to determine whether the Democratic Kampuchea government practiced racially discriminatory policies towards ethnic minorities during the Cambodian Genocide of 1975-79, because of the complexity of delineating what constitutes racial discrimination.  Some scholars have disputed the existence of discriminatory policies towards ethnic minorities and have even argued that the ruling Khmer Rouge regime was innocent of genocide. This paper will examine whether the Khmer Rouge implemented racially discriminatory policies towards Cambodia’s minority groups. Although Cambodia is composed of many ethnic groups, over 80% of its people are Khmer; only the larger minority groups with the most extensive documentation will be discussed in this paper: the Vietnamese, Chams, and Chinese.

It will be argued that in the experience of all three minority groups, the Khmer Rouge’s policies betrayed traces of racial discrimination; however, the severity and type of racial discrimination varied.

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