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Genocide
(redirected from Genocides)

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genocide, in international law, the intentional and systematic destruction, wholly or in part, by a government of a national, racial, religious, or ethnic group. Although the term genocide was first coined in 1944, the crime itself has been committed often in history. It was initially used to describe the systematic campaign for the extermination of peoples carried on by Nazi Germany, in its attempts in the 1930s and 40s to destroy the entire European Jewish community, and to eliminate other national groups in Eastern Europe. In 1945, the charter of the Nuremberg Tribunal listed persecution on racial or religious grounds as a crime for which the victorious Allies would try Nazi offenders. It established the principle of the individual accountability of government officials who carried out the extermination policies. The United Nations, by a convention concluded in 1949, defined in detail the crime of genocide and provided for its punishment by competent national courts of the state on whose territory the crime was committed, or by international tribunal. Charging that the convention violated national sovereignty sovereignty, supreme authority in a political community. The concept of sovereignty has had a long history of development, and it may be said that every political theorist since Plato has dealt with the notion in some manner, although not always explicitly.
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, especially in its provision for an international tribunal and in the potential liability of an individual citizen, the United States did not ratify it until 37 years later, in 1986. An international tribunal was established to prosecute genocide cases in the aftermath of the slaughter of more than 500,000 Tutsis in Rwanda Rwanda (rän`dä), officially Republic of Rwanda, republic (2005 est.
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 in 1994. In 1995 top civilian and military Bosnian Serb and Bosnian Croat leaders were charged by an international tribunal with genocide in the killing of thousands of Muslims during the breakup of the former Yugoslavia Yugoslavia (y
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.

Bibliography

See studies by I. L. Horowitz (1981), L. Kuper (1982), E. Staub (1989), and S. Power (2001).


genocide

Deliberate and systematic destruction of a racial, religious, political, or ethnic group. The term was coined by Raphael Lemkin, a Polish-born jurist who served as an adviser to the U.S. Department of War during World War II, to describe the premeditated effort to destroy a population (see Holocaust). In 1946 the UN General Assembly declared genocide a punishable crime. By this declaration, genocide by definition may be committed by an individual, group, or government, against one's own people or another, in peacetime or in wartime. This last point distinguishes genocide from “crimes against humanity,” whose legal definition specifies wartime. Suspects may be tried by a court in the country where the act was committed or by an international court (see International Criminal Court). An example of genocide more recent than the Holocaust is the slaughter of Tutsi people by the Hutu in Rwanda in the 1990s.


Genocide
See also Brutality, Massacre.
Auschwitz
largest Nazi extermination camp; more than 1,000,000 deaths there. [Ger. Hist.: Hitler, 958–959, 970, 1123]
Babi Yar
ravine near Kiev where Nazis slaughtered 10,000 Jews. [Russ. Hist.: Wigoder, 56]
Bergen-Belsen
Nazi slave labor and extermination camp. [Ger. Hist.: Hitler, 1187, 1188]
Buchenwald
showcase of Nazi atrocities. [Ger. Hist.: Hitler, 1055]
Dachau
primarily work camp, experienced share of Nazi horrors. [Ger. Hist.: Hitler, 1055]
Final Solution
Nazi plan decided fate of 6,000,000 Jews. [Ger. Hist.: Hitler, 1037–1061]
Holocaust
Nazi attempt at extermination of European Jewry (1933–1945). [Jew. Hist.: Wigoder, 266–267]
Lublin
Nazi extermination camp. [Ger. Hist.: Hitler, 970]
Majdanek
Nazi extermination camp. [Ger. Hist.: Wigoder, 113]
My Lai
American army division annihilates population of entire Vietnamese hamlet (March 16, 1968). [Am. Hist.: Kane, 450]
Ravensbrueck
women’s concentration camp in Germany. [Ger. Hist.: Shirer, 1275]
Sachsenhausen
Nazi concentration camp. [Ger. Hist.: Shirer, 375]
Six Million Jews
their deaths a testimony to Nazi “Final Solution.” [Eur. Hist.: Hitler, 1123]
Treblinka
Nazi extermination camp. [Ger. Hist.: Hitler, 970]
Wannsee Conference
“Final Solution” plotted and scheduled. [Ger. Hist.: Wigoder, 619]
Zyklon B
hydrogen cyanide; used by Nazis for mass extermination in concentration camps. [Ger. Hist.: Hitler, 970]

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Ethnic victims of genocide, humanitarian activists and scholars say the continued refusal by some countries to use the ``g'' word when referring to the Armenian massacre is a reason why genocides occurred with increasing frequency at the end of the 20th century and the early part of this century -- in Cambodia, Rwanda, Kosovo, Darfur.
s faint efforts to stop the genocides in Bosnia and Rwanda.
All genocides are unique, Finkelstein concluded, but to rank them is a moral abomination.
 
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