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ID190698
Title ProperAssaulting diversity as such
Other Title Informationthe ontology of dehumanisation in mass violence
LanguageENG
AuthorMichel, Torsten
Summary / Abstract (Note)Dehumanisation is one of the most invoked factors in analyses of mass atrocities with many scholars focusing on its crucial role in enabling perpetrators to inflict violence on their victims. However, while its application is widespread, its relevance is often assumed a priori, with claims regarding its empirical relevance often asserted rather than argued for. Not only does its meaning, nature, and function remain amorphous, current scholarship also lacks a general conceptualisation of the basic features that bind the manifold appearances of dehumanisation together. It is this paucity of sustained reflection and particularly the lack of conceptual clarity that the present article seeks to address. Drawing on the work of Hannah Arendt, it aims to deliver a more thoroughgoing appraisal of the nature of dehumanisation as a fundamental violation of plurality to conceptually consolidate and ground its meaning and bind together its diverse manifestations across cases of mass violence.
`In' analytical NoteEuropean Journal of International Security Vol. 8, No.3; Aug 2023: p.281 - 298
Journal SourceEuropean Journal of International Security Vol: 8 No 3
Key WordsGenocide ;  Hannah Arendt ;  Dehumanisation ;  Human Condition and Mass Violence


 
 
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