Putting forward the argument that the strength of democracies can be measured in how well minorities - especially ethnic and racial minorities - are treated, Larry May's Ethnic Cleansing maintains that unjust ethnic cleansing is one of the greatest challenges to the modern institutions of pluralistic and multi-cultural states.
Putting forward the argument that the strength of democracies can be measured in how well minorities - especially ethnic and racial minorities - are treated, Larry May's Ethnic Cleansing maintains that unjust ethnic cleansing is one of the greatest challenges to the modern institutions of pluralistic and multi-cultural states.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Larry May is an internationally renowned social/political philosopher and legal theorist who has published more than three dozen books. He is W. Alton Jones Professor of Philosophy and Law Emeritus at Vanderbilt University and Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at Washington University in St. Louis. He has published a four-volume study of the moral foundations of international criminal law and a three-volume history of legal and political thought. He is the co-author of Applied Ethics: A Multicultural Approach (Routledge, 2016) and author of Trafficking and the Conscience of Humanity (Routledge, 2024).
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction: Setting the Problem 2. A Proposed "Consensus" Definition 3. Ancient "Ethnic" Atrocities 4. The Trail of Tears 5. Darfur 6. Bosnia: The "Paradigm Case"? 7. Gaza and the West Bank 8. The Meaning of the Term 'Ethnic' 9. The Meaning of the Term "Cleansing" 10. Identity and Ethnicity 11. Minority Rights 12. Destroying versus Cleansing 13. Cleansing and Crimes Against Humanity 14. The 'Divorce' Metaphor 15. The Role of International Criminal Law 16. Prosecuting Perpetrators of Ethnic Cleansing 17. Defenses for Ethnic Cleansing 18. Voluntary Population Transfers 19. Forced Transfers and the "Eminent Domain" Metaphor 20. Justice After Ethnic Cleansing 21. Is Ethnic Cleansing Ever Necessary? 22. The Misuse of the Idea of Purity 23. Conclusions Bibliography
1. Introduction: Setting the Problem 2. A Proposed "Consensus" Definition 3. Ancient "Ethnic" Atrocities 4. The Trail of Tears 5. Darfur 6. Bosnia: The "Paradigm Case"? 7. Gaza and the West Bank 8. The Meaning of the Term 'Ethnic' 9. The Meaning of the Term "Cleansing" 10. Identity and Ethnicity 11. Minority Rights 12. Destroying versus Cleansing 13. Cleansing and Crimes Against Humanity 14. The 'Divorce' Metaphor 15. The Role of International Criminal Law 16. Prosecuting Perpetrators of Ethnic Cleansing 17. Defenses for Ethnic Cleansing 18. Voluntary Population Transfers 19. Forced Transfers and the "Eminent Domain" Metaphor 20. Justice After Ethnic Cleansing 21. Is Ethnic Cleansing Ever Necessary? 22. The Misuse of the Idea of Purity 23. Conclusions Bibliography
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