Genocide and Victimology

Genocide and Victimology

Eski, Yarin

Taylor & Francis Ltd

11/2020

222

Dura

Inglês

9781138311718

15 a 20 dias

453

Descrição não disponível.
Introduction 1.An existentialist victimology of genocide? 2.Victimology and genocide: neglected stories? 3. International criminal justice and the religion of humanity 4.The Rohingya Crisis: Accountability for Decades of Persecution 5.LGBT+ Genocide: Understanding Hetero-Nationality and the Politics of Psychological Silence 6. Symbiotic Victimization and Destruction: Law and Human/Other-Than-Human Relationality in Genocide 7.On 'visualising the truth of genocide': reflections on whakapapa and finding southern epistemology, occasioned by a tattered album from the nomos of the Holocaust 8.'Playing Srebrenica' - Theatre plays in the Netherlands regarding Srebrenica 9.The Role of Past Victimization in Genocidal Mythologies: Bosnian and Rwandan Experiences 10.Genocide and Forced Migration: The Dual Victimisation of Refugees Escaping War and Genocide 11.Fortress Britain or Migratory Haven? Genocide survivors' experiences of Migration to the UK Conclusion: A victimological imagination of genocide
UN;War Crimes;Victimological Imagination;Crimes Against Humanity;Genocide Laws;Rwanda;Genocide Studies;Bosnia;Genocide Convention;Victimhood;Srebrenica Genocide;Sagkeeng First Nation;Choiceless Choice;Iraq;Genocide Concept;Syria;Vice Versa;Interdisciplinary;Plains Indigenous Peoples;Genocide;International Criminal Justice;Victimology;Violated;Cosmopolitan victimology;Van Der Zwaard;Post-colonialism;Hamitic Myth;Rwandan genocides;CRPD;Cultural victimologies;Positivistic Victimology;Whanganui River;Von Hentig;Young Men;Slavic Muslims;EU Border Control;Human Rights Story;Moral Injury;Political Homophobia;ICC's Intervention