This book explores why some episodes of mass political violence and
genocide are so much deadlier than others and under what conditions
perpetrators in government and society opt for brutality as a means of
accomplishing their goals. Introducing the new concept of "mass
political violence" to explain genocide and other mass killings in the
modern world, the author investigates "how" perpetrators sustain the
capacity to enact violence on a large-scale, irrespective of motives.
Cases including the Holocaust, Soviet Union, Rwanda, Cambodia, the
Lord’s Resistance Army, the Islamic State, the Ottoman Empire of the
1890s, Mao Zedong’s revolutionary violence, the Congo Crisis, and
Darfur are used by the author to identify four types of mass political
violence perpetrators – state actors, state-society coalitions,
state-sponsored groups, and non-state actors to explain historical
trends and identify which perpetrators are most likely to emerge in a
given socio-political context and sustain violence over time.
Comparative and grounded in case studies, this book will interest
policymakers, diplomats, governmental advisers, practitioners, and
industry researchers. It will also be invaluable to students and
scholars of Political Science, International Affairs, Holocaust and
Genocide Studies, Human Rights, Sociology, Anthropology, Geography,
Political Psychology, Religious Studies, Gender Studies, Public
Policy, Media Studies, and Criminology.
Les mer
State-Society Relations in the Making of Mass Political Violence
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781040304440
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter