Criminal Justice reflection assignment

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AlvarezPPTCh10.ppt

Chapter 10:

Genocide

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Defining Genocide

  • Most lethal form of collective political violence
  • GENO–CIDE is derived from
  • Greek “GENOS” (race or tribe)
  • Latin “CIDE” (killing
  • Defining genocide is difficult
  • Misuse of the word
  • Overlap between genocide and related human rights violations and war crimes
  • Selective application of the term
  • Vague terminology (in whole or in part)
  • Variation in intent, scale, method, and context)

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

United Nations Definition of Genocide

  • On April 9, 1948, the general assembly of the United Nations approved the Genocide Convention which defined genocide as a crime under international law.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

U.N. Definition

  • Any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group
  • Killing members of the group
  • Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group
  • Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part
  • Imposing measures to prevent births within the group
  • Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Common Characteristics of Genocide

  • Perpetrated by the STATE
  • Planned, systematic, and ongoing attempts to destroy a population
  • Victims are chosen because of their identity as members of a targeted group
  • Vulnerability of the targeted group
  • Occur for varied reasons:
  • Eliminate real or imagined threat
  • Spread terror among enemies
  • Acquire economic wealth
  • Implement belief, theory, or ideology

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

20th Century Genocide

  • Armenian Genocide
  • Holocaust
  • Cambodia
  • Bosnia
  • Rwanda

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Selected 20th Century Examples of Genocide

Location Years Perpetrators Victim Group Death Count
South West Africa 1904–1905 German military Hereros 60,000
Turkey 1915–1923 Turkish military and police Armenians 1 million
Soviet Union 1932–1933 Soviet police Ukrainians 3–7 million
Nazi-occupied Europe 1941–1945 Nazis and collaborators Jews, Gypsies, Slavs, homosexuals 21 million
Indonesia 1965–1966 Indonesian military and police Indonesian Communists 500,000
Guatemala 1968–1993 Guatemalan military and police Mayans 200,000
Bangladesh 1971 Pakistani military Bengalis 1–3 million
Burundi 1972 Tutsi military, police, and paramilitaries Hutu 100,000–150,000
East Timor 1975–1999 Indonesian military East Timorese 200,000
Cambodia 1975–1979 Khmer Rouge Ethnic Chinese, Ethnic Vietnamese, Ethnic Chams, Buddhist Monks, Educated Classes 1–2 million
Iraq 1988 Iraqi military Kurds 500,000–100,000
Bosnia 1992–1995 Bosnian Serbs Bosnian Muslims 250,000
Rwanda 1994 Hutu military, police, and paramilitaries Tutsis 800,000

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Why Do Genocides Happen?

  • Genocide does NOT simply unfold as a sudden and unexpected catastrophe.
  • Four Motivators for Genocide:
  • Developmental: targeted groups seen as an impediment to the colonization and/or exploitation of a given geographic area
  • Despotic: government wields genocide as a weapon against rivals for political power
  • Ideological: attempted destruction of a population because of a belief system; seeking utopia
  • Retributive: one group wages war against another in the struggle for political and social power

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Society Types from Genocidal to Permissive

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Source: Horowitz, I. L. (1997). Taking lives: Genocide and state power (fourth ed., expanded and Revised. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Precursors to Genocide

  • Perpetrated almost exclusively by totalitarian states
  • Leaders of these governments are megamurderers
  • Stalin’s Soviet Union
  • Mao’s China
  • Hitler’s Germany
  • Government leadership based on fear and coercion
  • War enables genocide
  • Universe of obligation and heightened feelings of marginalization experienced by targeted scapegoat groups during a war

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Perpetrators of Genocide

  • Most genocide participants are ordinary people who believe in the necessity of their action
  • “Banality of evil”
  • 9 primary motivations for participations
  • Ideological
  • Bigoted
  • Violent
  • Fearful
  • Careerist
  • Materialist
  • Disciplined
  • Comradely
  • Bureaucratic

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Victims of Genocide

  • Selected for extermination because they fall into stigmatized social category
  • Relatively powerless due to political and social marginalization
  • Often immigrant “middleman minority groups” breed resentment and hostility
  • Typically have long histories of persecution and stigma

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

When People Do Nothing

  • Genocide depends on bystanders who defer to powerful government authority.
  • Stanley Milgram experiment
  • Most people believe that nothing can be done and that they are too powerless to stop the violence.
  • Many also agree with the policies of destruction that result in genocide.
  • International community also stands by without taking action.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

International Law and Genocide

  • There is hope that the next century will not be as dreadful as the last
  • Netherlands Institute of War Documentation
  • International Criminal Tribunal at the Hague
  • International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
  • International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
  • International Criminal Court
  • Increasing strength if International Human Rights Law and weakening of National Sovereignty

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Conclusions

  • International law has gained a new potency and preeminence in recent years.
  • We are continually (re)defining the nature of international relations and justice.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Open-Access Student Resources

· SAGE journal articles

· Multimedia resources

and more at study.sagepub.com/alvarez3e

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition

© 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Alvarez/Bachman, Violence: The Enduring Problem, 3rd Edition © 2017 SAGE Publications, Inc.