Debates on colonial genocide in the 21st century

Bibliographic Information

Debates on colonial genocide in the 21st century

Marouf Hasian, Jr

(Palgrave pivot)

Palgrave Macmillan, c2020

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book analyses the debates on colonial genocide in the 21st century and introduces cases where states are reluctant to acknowledge genocides. The author departs from traditional studies of the work of Raphael Lemkin or U.N. definitions of genocide so that readers can examine genocide recognition as a political act that is bound up in partial perceptions and political motivations. The study looks at the Tasmanian genocide, Al-Nakba, and several other tragic events. It also looks at the ways that these historical and contemporary debates about colonial genocides are related to today's conversations about apologies and other restorative justice acts. This work will be of interest to a wide range of audiences including researchers, scholars, graduate students, and policy makers in the fields of political history, genocide studies, and political science.

Table of Contents

1. Chapter 1/Introduction: Critical Genocide Studies and the Need for 21st Century Decolonization Debates 2. Chapter 2: Remembering and Forgetting the Tasmanian Genocide 3. Chapter 3: The Indigeneity Wars: Academic and Public Refusals to Recognize Al-Nakba 4. Chapter 4: Opening Up the "Pandora's Box" That Comes with Academic, Legal, and Public Acknowledgments of "Colonial Genocides"

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