Genocide and International Relations: Changing Patterns in the Transitions of the Late Modern World
'Genocide and International Relations' lays the foundations for a new perspective on genocide in the modern world. Genocide studies have been influenced, negatively as well as positively, by the political and cultural context in which the field has developed. In particular, a narrow vision of comparative studies has been influential in which genocide is viewed mainly as a 'domestic' phenomenon of states. This book emphasizes the international context of genocide, seeking to specify more precisely the relationships between genocide and the international system. Shaw aims to re-interpret the classical European context of genocide in this frame, to provide a comprehensive international perspective on Cold War and post-Cold War genocide, and to re-evaluate the key transitions of the end of the Second World War and the end of the Cold War.
1115559631
Genocide and International Relations: Changing Patterns in the Transitions of the Late Modern World
'Genocide and International Relations' lays the foundations for a new perspective on genocide in the modern world. Genocide studies have been influenced, negatively as well as positively, by the political and cultural context in which the field has developed. In particular, a narrow vision of comparative studies has been influential in which genocide is viewed mainly as a 'domestic' phenomenon of states. This book emphasizes the international context of genocide, seeking to specify more precisely the relationships between genocide and the international system. Shaw aims to re-interpret the classical European context of genocide in this frame, to provide a comprehensive international perspective on Cold War and post-Cold War genocide, and to re-evaluate the key transitions of the end of the Second World War and the end of the Cold War.
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Genocide and International Relations: Changing Patterns in the Transitions of the Late Modern World

Genocide and International Relations: Changing Patterns in the Transitions of the Late Modern World

by Martin Shaw
Genocide and International Relations: Changing Patterns in the Transitions of the Late Modern World

Genocide and International Relations: Changing Patterns in the Transitions of the Late Modern World

by Martin Shaw

Hardcover

$121.00 
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Overview

'Genocide and International Relations' lays the foundations for a new perspective on genocide in the modern world. Genocide studies have been influenced, negatively as well as positively, by the political and cultural context in which the field has developed. In particular, a narrow vision of comparative studies has been influential in which genocide is viewed mainly as a 'domestic' phenomenon of states. This book emphasizes the international context of genocide, seeking to specify more precisely the relationships between genocide and the international system. Shaw aims to re-interpret the classical European context of genocide in this frame, to provide a comprehensive international perspective on Cold War and post-Cold War genocide, and to re-evaluate the key transitions of the end of the Second World War and the end of the Cold War.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780521110136
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 09/19/2013
Pages: 246
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Martin Shaw is a historical sociologist specialising in global politics, war and genocide. He is Research Professor of International Relations at the Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals, Professorial Fellow in International Relations and Human Rights at Roehampton University, London, and Emeritus Professor of Sussex University. Shaw's books What is Genocide? (2007) and War and Genocide: Organized Killing in Modern Society (2003) have established him as a major authority in the genocide field. He is the author of several books on war, most recently The New Western Way of War: Risk-Transfer War and Its Crisis in Iraq (2005) and Civil Society and Media in Global Crises: Representing Distant Violence (1996), and on global change, notably Theory of the Global State: Globality as Unfinished Revolution (Cambridge University Press, 2000). His website is martinshaw.org.

Table of Contents

Introduction; Part I. Perspectives: 1. Emancipating genocide research; 2. Fallacies of the comparative genocide paradigm; 3. World-historical perspectives: international and colonial; Part II. Twentieth-Century Genocide: 4. European genocide: inter-imperial crisis and world war; 5. The 1948 Convention and the transition in genocide; 6. Cold War, decolonization and post-colonial genocide; 7. The end of the Cold War and genocide; Part III. New Patterns of Genocide: 8. Genocide in political and armed conflict: theoretical issues; 9. Genocide in twenty-first-century regional and global relations; 10. Conclusions: history and future of genocide.
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