Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:722Hits:20001017Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID114672
Title ProperDestroy them to save us
Other Title Informationtheories of genocide and the logics of political violence
LanguageENG
AuthorStraus, Scott
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Based on an analytic review of recent scholarly advances in genocide studies, this article investigates the causes, concept, and logic of genocide while suggesting a set of theoretical propositions and avenues for future research. Two emerging theoretical streams of literature on causes-strategic and ideological-highlight different dimensions of genocide and should be thought of as compatible. The study of genocide should be embedded in a broader study of political violence; the two literatures have been strangely cloistered from each other. To that end, genocide should be conceptualized as group-selective, large-scale violence whose purpose is group destruction. This stands in contrast to violence that is individually selective or indiscriminate; small-scale and not sustained across time and space; and whose purpose is repression, communication, or some other outcome short of group destruction. To develop existing theory and to bring the study of genocide closer to the literature on violence, studying variation in outcomes is essential; that is, students of genocide should ask why genocide and not another outcome occurs, rather than only studying common patterns among genocide cases. Similarly, rather than study primarily sources of escalation and accelerators of violence, scholars should also theorize restraint and decelerators of violence. Further, scholars of genocide should focus attention on the interaction between national and sub-national actors as well as periods of escalation or de-escalation. In these ways and others proposed in the essay, genocide studies can build on recent gains and develop a broader and more coherent field of theoretical inquiry.
`In' analytical NoteTerrorism and Political Violence Vol. 24, No.4; Sep-Oct 2012: p.544-560
Journal SourceTerrorism and Political Violence Vol. 24, No.4; Sep-Oct 2012: p.544-560
Key WordsConflict Processes ;  Constraint ;  Genocide ;  Ideology ;  Local Actors ;  Mass Killing ;  Negative Cases ;  Periodization ;  Political Violence


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text