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Reading the Rwandan Genocide

International Studies Review, 2001
There has been an explosion of scholarly writing on Rwanda since the genocide in 1994. Until then, the country appeared to be unknown or ignored by scholars. This essay attempts to critically synthesize some of this new scholarship by focusing on primarily two issues: the types of explanatory models developed to explain the genocide and the positions ...
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Casualty Estimates in the Rwandan Genocide

Journal of Genocide Research, 2020
The estimation of casualties in any situation of political conflict is challenging. The state-of-the-art statistical tools1 require named, overlapping lists of victims, location, time and informati...
David A. Armstrong   +2 more
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Rwandan Genocide

2018
This important reference work offers students an accessible overview of the Rwandan Genocide, with more than 100 detailed articles by leading scholars on an array of topics and themes and 20 key primary source documents. Tracing the history of Rwanda prior to, during, and after German and Belgian colonization of Rwanda through the present day,
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The 1994 Rwandan Genocide

2018
Links between human factors, governance, and environmental degradation have the potential to trigger internecine conflict, such as the 1994 genocide in Rwanda. Evidence suggests that this trend will persist in the near term because climate change and the adverse effects of the environment will continue to stress marginal environments in places with ...
Amy K. Richmond, Francis A. Galgano
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Studying the Microdynamics of the Rwandan Genocide

British Journal of Criminology, 2010
The genocide in Rwanda in 1994 stands out for the enormous number of people killed in a relatively short period of time; the mass involvement of the civilian population and the extreme and violent nature of the killings: victims were hunted down, beaten, raped and mutilated before being killed by machetes.
Smeulers, A.L., Hoex, L.
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The Historiography of the Rwandan Genocide

2008
In recent years, the Rwandan genocide has generated a large and growing academic literature. The disciplines and themes within the scholarship are diverse. History, political science, law, and anthropology are well represented in the academic literature, but some of the most prominent contributions come from human rights practitioners and journalists ...
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Ibitero Means and Motive in the Rwandan Genocide

Journal of Genocide Research, 2004
No Abstract. African Safety Promotion: A Journal of Injury and Violence Prevention Vol.
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The Rwandan genocide: a legal analysis

African Identities, 2010
The customary international law on genocide established at the 1948 Genocide Convention suggests that neighbouring countries that watch genocide take place in another state and fail to take steps to stop it can also be prosecuted for allowing the massacre of people.
Mpfariseni Budeli, Beauty Vambe
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Conspiracy to Murder: The Rwandan Genocide

Foreign Affairs, 2004
April 2004 sees the tenth anniversary of the Rwanda genocide, an event generally acknowledged to be both one of the most appalling of the twentieth century and one that could have been avoided. Linda Melvern's new book is a damning indictment of almost all the key figures and the institutions involved.
Nicolas Van De Walle, Linda Melvern
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Female Perpetrators of the Rwandan Genocide

International Feminist Journal of Politics, 2013
AbstractThis article explores and analyzes the role of women who exercised agency as perpetrators during the genocide in Rwanda in 1994. Genocide narratives traditionally cast women as victims, and many women did suffer horrific abuses and become victims of torture in Rwanda.
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