Postgenocide
Interdisciplinary Reflections on the Effects of Genocide
Herausgeber: Mulaj, Klejda
Postgenocide
Interdisciplinary Reflections on the Effects of Genocide
Herausgeber: Mulaj, Klejda
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This edited volume studies the after-effects of genocide, exploring the ways in which societies are shaped by a history of such extreme violence. Contributions from a variety of perspectives, including law, political science, sociology, and ethnography, explore previously overlooked themes and cases to reassess existing assumptions in the field.
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This edited volume studies the after-effects of genocide, exploring the ways in which societies are shaped by a history of such extreme violence. Contributions from a variety of perspectives, including law, political science, sociology, and ethnography, explore previously overlooked themes and cases to reassess existing assumptions in the field.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 336
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Mai 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 155mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 739g
- ISBN-13: 9780192895189
- ISBN-10: 0192895184
- Artikelnr.: 61119587
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 336
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Mai 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 236mm x 155mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 739g
- ISBN-13: 9780192895189
- ISBN-10: 0192895184
- Artikelnr.: 61119587
Klejda Mulaj studies political violence with particular reference to war and mass atrocity. Her latest published work dwells on effects of mass violence at the intersection between war and peace; nationalism; state-formation; and postconflict rebuilding. She is author of Politics of Ethnic Cleansing (2008); editor and author of Violent Non-State Actors in World Politics (2010); and author of 25 peer reviewed papers and book chapters. She has taught at university level since 2001 and is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. She obtained her PhD in International Relations from London School of Economics and Political Science in 2004.
* 1: Klejda Mulaj: Introduction. Postgenocide: Living with Permutations
of Genocide Harms
* Part I: The Law and Responsibility for Genocide
* 2: Kevin Aquilina: Challenges to Criminalising State Responsibility
for Genocide
* 3: Rajika L. Shah: The Role of Law in Enabling Postgenocide Recovery:
Assessing the Importance of Property Restitution
* 4: Christopher Soler: Postgenocide Justice? Assessing the Prosecution
and Punishment of Genocide by Internationalized Courts and Tribunals
* 5: Jobair Alam: Responsibility to Protect in International Criminal
Law: The Case of the Genocide against the Rohingya
* Part II: Genocide Denial and Remembrance
* 6: Tatevik Mnatsakanyan: Sovereignty, Subjectivity, Denial: The
Armenian Genocide, Generative Denials, and Postgenocide Politics in
Contemporary Turkey
* 7: Klejda Mulaj: Constructions of Genocide Denial and Remembrance:
Fractured National Identity in Postgenocide Bosnia
* 8: Andrew Wallis: Politics of Inter/National Denial of the Genocide
against the Tutsi in Rwanda
* Part III: Postgenocide Identities, Memory, and Ir/reconciliation
* 9: Martine Louise Hawkes: Memory, Identity, and Possession: Personal
Objects from Genocide in Galleries, Museums, and Archives
* 10: Marcia Esparza: Indigeneity, Memory, and Postgenocide in
Guatemala: The Stillness Power of Local Archives
* 11: Maureen S. Hiebert: Rhetorical versus Substantive Reconciliation
After Cultural Genocide in Canada
* 12: Christopher P. Davey: Conclusion. Further Agendas for
Postgenocide Research
of Genocide Harms
* Part I: The Law and Responsibility for Genocide
* 2: Kevin Aquilina: Challenges to Criminalising State Responsibility
for Genocide
* 3: Rajika L. Shah: The Role of Law in Enabling Postgenocide Recovery:
Assessing the Importance of Property Restitution
* 4: Christopher Soler: Postgenocide Justice? Assessing the Prosecution
and Punishment of Genocide by Internationalized Courts and Tribunals
* 5: Jobair Alam: Responsibility to Protect in International Criminal
Law: The Case of the Genocide against the Rohingya
* Part II: Genocide Denial and Remembrance
* 6: Tatevik Mnatsakanyan: Sovereignty, Subjectivity, Denial: The
Armenian Genocide, Generative Denials, and Postgenocide Politics in
Contemporary Turkey
* 7: Klejda Mulaj: Constructions of Genocide Denial and Remembrance:
Fractured National Identity in Postgenocide Bosnia
* 8: Andrew Wallis: Politics of Inter/National Denial of the Genocide
against the Tutsi in Rwanda
* Part III: Postgenocide Identities, Memory, and Ir/reconciliation
* 9: Martine Louise Hawkes: Memory, Identity, and Possession: Personal
Objects from Genocide in Galleries, Museums, and Archives
* 10: Marcia Esparza: Indigeneity, Memory, and Postgenocide in
Guatemala: The Stillness Power of Local Archives
* 11: Maureen S. Hiebert: Rhetorical versus Substantive Reconciliation
After Cultural Genocide in Canada
* 12: Christopher P. Davey: Conclusion. Further Agendas for
Postgenocide Research
* 1: Klejda Mulaj: Introduction. Postgenocide: Living with Permutations
of Genocide Harms
* Part I: The Law and Responsibility for Genocide
* 2: Kevin Aquilina: Challenges to Criminalising State Responsibility
for Genocide
* 3: Rajika L. Shah: The Role of Law in Enabling Postgenocide Recovery:
Assessing the Importance of Property Restitution
* 4: Christopher Soler: Postgenocide Justice? Assessing the Prosecution
and Punishment of Genocide by Internationalized Courts and Tribunals
* 5: Jobair Alam: Responsibility to Protect in International Criminal
Law: The Case of the Genocide against the Rohingya
* Part II: Genocide Denial and Remembrance
* 6: Tatevik Mnatsakanyan: Sovereignty, Subjectivity, Denial: The
Armenian Genocide, Generative Denials, and Postgenocide Politics in
Contemporary Turkey
* 7: Klejda Mulaj: Constructions of Genocide Denial and Remembrance:
Fractured National Identity in Postgenocide Bosnia
* 8: Andrew Wallis: Politics of Inter/National Denial of the Genocide
against the Tutsi in Rwanda
* Part III: Postgenocide Identities, Memory, and Ir/reconciliation
* 9: Martine Louise Hawkes: Memory, Identity, and Possession: Personal
Objects from Genocide in Galleries, Museums, and Archives
* 10: Marcia Esparza: Indigeneity, Memory, and Postgenocide in
Guatemala: The Stillness Power of Local Archives
* 11: Maureen S. Hiebert: Rhetorical versus Substantive Reconciliation
After Cultural Genocide in Canada
* 12: Christopher P. Davey: Conclusion. Further Agendas for
Postgenocide Research
of Genocide Harms
* Part I: The Law and Responsibility for Genocide
* 2: Kevin Aquilina: Challenges to Criminalising State Responsibility
for Genocide
* 3: Rajika L. Shah: The Role of Law in Enabling Postgenocide Recovery:
Assessing the Importance of Property Restitution
* 4: Christopher Soler: Postgenocide Justice? Assessing the Prosecution
and Punishment of Genocide by Internationalized Courts and Tribunals
* 5: Jobair Alam: Responsibility to Protect in International Criminal
Law: The Case of the Genocide against the Rohingya
* Part II: Genocide Denial and Remembrance
* 6: Tatevik Mnatsakanyan: Sovereignty, Subjectivity, Denial: The
Armenian Genocide, Generative Denials, and Postgenocide Politics in
Contemporary Turkey
* 7: Klejda Mulaj: Constructions of Genocide Denial and Remembrance:
Fractured National Identity in Postgenocide Bosnia
* 8: Andrew Wallis: Politics of Inter/National Denial of the Genocide
against the Tutsi in Rwanda
* Part III: Postgenocide Identities, Memory, and Ir/reconciliation
* 9: Martine Louise Hawkes: Memory, Identity, and Possession: Personal
Objects from Genocide in Galleries, Museums, and Archives
* 10: Marcia Esparza: Indigeneity, Memory, and Postgenocide in
Guatemala: The Stillness Power of Local Archives
* 11: Maureen S. Hiebert: Rhetorical versus Substantive Reconciliation
After Cultural Genocide in Canada
* 12: Christopher P. Davey: Conclusion. Further Agendas for
Postgenocide Research