
The Problems of Genocide: Permanent Security and the Language of Transgression (Human Rights in History)
Cambridge University Press, 2/4/2021
EAN 9781107503120, ISBN10: 1107503124
Paperback, 612 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 3.5 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English
Genocide is not only a problem of mass death, but also of how, as a relatively new idea and law, it organizes and distorts thinking about civilian destruction. Taking the normative perspective of civilian immunity from military attack, A. Dirk Moses argues that the implicit hierarchy of international criminal law, atop which sits genocide as the 'crime of crimes', blinds us to other types of humanly caused civilian death, like bombing cities, and the 'collateral damage' of missile and drone strikes. Talk of genocide, then, can function ideologically to detract from systematic violence against civilians perpetrated by governments of all types. The Problems of Genocide contends that this violence is the consequence of 'permanent security' imperatives: the striving of states, and armed groups seeking to found states, to make themselves invulnerable to threats.
Introduction
The Problems of Genocide
Part I. The Language of Transgression
1. The Language of Transgression, 1500s to 1890s
2. The Language of Transgression, 1890s to 1930s
3. Raphael Lemkin and the Protection of Small Nations
4. The Many Types of Destruction
5. Inventing Genocide in the 1940s
Part II. Permanent Security
6. Permanent Security in History
Empire and Settler Colonialism
7. The Nazi Empire as Illiberal Permanent Security
8. Human Rights, Population 'Transfer', and the Foundation of the Postwar Order
9. Imagining Nation-Security in South Asia and Palestine
Partition, Population Exchange, and Communal Hostages
Part III. The Language of Transgression, Permanent Security, and Holocaust Memory
10. Lemkin, Arendt, Vietnam, and Liberal Permanent Security
11. Genocide Studies and the Repression of the Political
12. Holocaust Memory, Exemplary Victims, and Permanent Security Today.