Reconstructing Atrocity Prevention
Herausgeber: Galis, Tibi; Zucker, Alex; Rosenberg, Sheri P.
Reconstructing Atrocity Prevention
Herausgeber: Galis, Tibi; Zucker, Alex; Rosenberg, Sheri P.
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This proposes a new framework for atrocity prevention, featuring scholars from around the globe including three former UN special advisers.
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This proposes a new framework for atrocity prevention, featuring scholars from around the globe including three former UN special advisers.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 546
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. August 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 934g
- ISBN-13: 9781107094963
- ISBN-10: 1107094968
- Artikelnr.: 42768176
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 546
- Erscheinungstermin: 19. August 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 33mm
- Gewicht: 934g
- ISBN-13: 9781107094963
- ISBN-10: 1107094968
- Artikelnr.: 42768176
Preface Roméo Dallaire; Introduction Sheri Rosenberg, Tibi Galis and Alex
Zucker; Part I. Fluidities: 1. What is being prevented? Genocide, mass
atrocity, and conceptual ambiguity in the anti-atrocity movement Scott
Straus; 2. The pistol on the wall: how coercive military intervention
limits atrocity prevention policies Bridget Conley-Zilkic; 3.
Operationalizing the 'atrocity prevention lens': making prevention a living
reality Alex Bellamy; 4. The 'narrow but deep approach' to implementing the
responsibility to protect: reassessing the focus on international crimes
Jennifer Welsh; 5. The role of social psychology in preventing
group-selective mass atrocities Johanna Vollhardt; 6. Gender, sexualized
violence, and the prevention of genocide Elisa von Joeden-Forgey; Part II.
Above Chronology: 7. Audacity of hope: international criminal law, mass
atrocity crimes, and prevention Sheri Rosenberg; 8. Historical dialogue and
the prevention of atrocity crimes Elazar Barkan; 9. Through the barrel of a
gun: can information from the global arms trade contribute to genocide
prevention? Andrew Feinstein; 10. The individual responsibility to protect
Edward Luck and Dana Luck; 11. Resource predation, contemporary conflict,
and the prevention of genocide and mass atrocities Michael Klare; 12.
Deconstructing risk and developing resilience: the role of inhibitory
factors in genocide prevention Deborah Mayersen; 13. Military means of
preventing mass atrocities Dwight Raymond; Part III. Acting Out Prevention:
14. Performing prevention: civil society, performance studies, and the role
of public activism in genocide prevention Kerry Whigham; 15. Early warning
for mass atrocities: tracking escalation parameters at the population level
Jennifer Leaning; 16. Mobilizing economic sanctions for preventing mass
atrocities: from targeting dictators to enablers George Lopez; 17.
Corporate behavior and atrocity prevention: is aiding and abetting
liability the best way to influence corporate behavior? Owen Pell and Kelly
Bonner; 18. A short story of a long effort: the United Nations and the
prevention of mass atrocities Ekkehard Strauss; 19. The practical use of
early warning and response in preventing mass atrocities and genocide:
experiences from the Great Lakes region Ashad Sentongo; 20. The Argentinian
national mechanism for the prevention of genocide: a case study in
contemporary preventive institution-building Ramiro Riera.
Zucker; Part I. Fluidities: 1. What is being prevented? Genocide, mass
atrocity, and conceptual ambiguity in the anti-atrocity movement Scott
Straus; 2. The pistol on the wall: how coercive military intervention
limits atrocity prevention policies Bridget Conley-Zilkic; 3.
Operationalizing the 'atrocity prevention lens': making prevention a living
reality Alex Bellamy; 4. The 'narrow but deep approach' to implementing the
responsibility to protect: reassessing the focus on international crimes
Jennifer Welsh; 5. The role of social psychology in preventing
group-selective mass atrocities Johanna Vollhardt; 6. Gender, sexualized
violence, and the prevention of genocide Elisa von Joeden-Forgey; Part II.
Above Chronology: 7. Audacity of hope: international criminal law, mass
atrocity crimes, and prevention Sheri Rosenberg; 8. Historical dialogue and
the prevention of atrocity crimes Elazar Barkan; 9. Through the barrel of a
gun: can information from the global arms trade contribute to genocide
prevention? Andrew Feinstein; 10. The individual responsibility to protect
Edward Luck and Dana Luck; 11. Resource predation, contemporary conflict,
and the prevention of genocide and mass atrocities Michael Klare; 12.
Deconstructing risk and developing resilience: the role of inhibitory
factors in genocide prevention Deborah Mayersen; 13. Military means of
preventing mass atrocities Dwight Raymond; Part III. Acting Out Prevention:
14. Performing prevention: civil society, performance studies, and the role
of public activism in genocide prevention Kerry Whigham; 15. Early warning
for mass atrocities: tracking escalation parameters at the population level
Jennifer Leaning; 16. Mobilizing economic sanctions for preventing mass
atrocities: from targeting dictators to enablers George Lopez; 17.
Corporate behavior and atrocity prevention: is aiding and abetting
liability the best way to influence corporate behavior? Owen Pell and Kelly
Bonner; 18. A short story of a long effort: the United Nations and the
prevention of mass atrocities Ekkehard Strauss; 19. The practical use of
early warning and response in preventing mass atrocities and genocide:
experiences from the Great Lakes region Ashad Sentongo; 20. The Argentinian
national mechanism for the prevention of genocide: a case study in
contemporary preventive institution-building Ramiro Riera.
Preface Roméo Dallaire; Introduction Sheri Rosenberg, Tibi Galis and Alex
Zucker; Part I. Fluidities: 1. What is being prevented? Genocide, mass
atrocity, and conceptual ambiguity in the anti-atrocity movement Scott
Straus; 2. The pistol on the wall: how coercive military intervention
limits atrocity prevention policies Bridget Conley-Zilkic; 3.
Operationalizing the 'atrocity prevention lens': making prevention a living
reality Alex Bellamy; 4. The 'narrow but deep approach' to implementing the
responsibility to protect: reassessing the focus on international crimes
Jennifer Welsh; 5. The role of social psychology in preventing
group-selective mass atrocities Johanna Vollhardt; 6. Gender, sexualized
violence, and the prevention of genocide Elisa von Joeden-Forgey; Part II.
Above Chronology: 7. Audacity of hope: international criminal law, mass
atrocity crimes, and prevention Sheri Rosenberg; 8. Historical dialogue and
the prevention of atrocity crimes Elazar Barkan; 9. Through the barrel of a
gun: can information from the global arms trade contribute to genocide
prevention? Andrew Feinstein; 10. The individual responsibility to protect
Edward Luck and Dana Luck; 11. Resource predation, contemporary conflict,
and the prevention of genocide and mass atrocities Michael Klare; 12.
Deconstructing risk and developing resilience: the role of inhibitory
factors in genocide prevention Deborah Mayersen; 13. Military means of
preventing mass atrocities Dwight Raymond; Part III. Acting Out Prevention:
14. Performing prevention: civil society, performance studies, and the role
of public activism in genocide prevention Kerry Whigham; 15. Early warning
for mass atrocities: tracking escalation parameters at the population level
Jennifer Leaning; 16. Mobilizing economic sanctions for preventing mass
atrocities: from targeting dictators to enablers George Lopez; 17.
Corporate behavior and atrocity prevention: is aiding and abetting
liability the best way to influence corporate behavior? Owen Pell and Kelly
Bonner; 18. A short story of a long effort: the United Nations and the
prevention of mass atrocities Ekkehard Strauss; 19. The practical use of
early warning and response in preventing mass atrocities and genocide:
experiences from the Great Lakes region Ashad Sentongo; 20. The Argentinian
national mechanism for the prevention of genocide: a case study in
contemporary preventive institution-building Ramiro Riera.
Zucker; Part I. Fluidities: 1. What is being prevented? Genocide, mass
atrocity, and conceptual ambiguity in the anti-atrocity movement Scott
Straus; 2. The pistol on the wall: how coercive military intervention
limits atrocity prevention policies Bridget Conley-Zilkic; 3.
Operationalizing the 'atrocity prevention lens': making prevention a living
reality Alex Bellamy; 4. The 'narrow but deep approach' to implementing the
responsibility to protect: reassessing the focus on international crimes
Jennifer Welsh; 5. The role of social psychology in preventing
group-selective mass atrocities Johanna Vollhardt; 6. Gender, sexualized
violence, and the prevention of genocide Elisa von Joeden-Forgey; Part II.
Above Chronology: 7. Audacity of hope: international criminal law, mass
atrocity crimes, and prevention Sheri Rosenberg; 8. Historical dialogue and
the prevention of atrocity crimes Elazar Barkan; 9. Through the barrel of a
gun: can information from the global arms trade contribute to genocide
prevention? Andrew Feinstein; 10. The individual responsibility to protect
Edward Luck and Dana Luck; 11. Resource predation, contemporary conflict,
and the prevention of genocide and mass atrocities Michael Klare; 12.
Deconstructing risk and developing resilience: the role of inhibitory
factors in genocide prevention Deborah Mayersen; 13. Military means of
preventing mass atrocities Dwight Raymond; Part III. Acting Out Prevention:
14. Performing prevention: civil society, performance studies, and the role
of public activism in genocide prevention Kerry Whigham; 15. Early warning
for mass atrocities: tracking escalation parameters at the population level
Jennifer Leaning; 16. Mobilizing economic sanctions for preventing mass
atrocities: from targeting dictators to enablers George Lopez; 17.
Corporate behavior and atrocity prevention: is aiding and abetting
liability the best way to influence corporate behavior? Owen Pell and Kelly
Bonner; 18. A short story of a long effort: the United Nations and the
prevention of mass atrocities Ekkehard Strauss; 19. The practical use of
early warning and response in preventing mass atrocities and genocide:
experiences from the Great Lakes region Ashad Sentongo; 20. The Argentinian
national mechanism for the prevention of genocide: a case study in
contemporary preventive institution-building Ramiro Riera.