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Confronting Genocide: Never Again?

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Confronting Genocide: Never Again? The Choices for the 21st Century Education Program, Watson Institute for International Studies, Brown University. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Confronting Genocide: Never Again?


1
Confronting Genocide Never Again?
  • The Choices for the 21st Century Education
    Program, Watson Institute for International
    Studies,
  • Brown University.

2
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3
Part One Defining Genocide
  • According to the United Nations Genocide
    Convention, genocide is a coordinated plan to
    destroy a national, ethnic, racial or religious
    group by killing, causing serious harm,
    inflicting conditions designed to bring about its
    destruction, preventing births within the group,
    or removing children from the group.

4
A. World War One
  • Raphael Lemkin and the term genocide
  • The international community
  • World War One
  • The failure of the League of Nations
  • The 1933 Madrid Conference

5
B. World War Two and the Cold War
  • How did World War Two change the international
    community?
  • The Nuremberg trials
  • The United Nations Genocide Convention (1948)

6
  • How did the Cold War affect the role of the
    United Nations?
  • What was the reaction in the United States to the
    Genocide Convention?

7
C. After the Cold War
  • The future of international cooperation
  • Events that have indicated a change in the
    international attitude toward state sovereignty
  • The United States and the International Criminal
    Court

8
Part Two Case Studies
  • Throughout the last hundred years the attempted
    extermination of an entire group has occurred
    time after time. Despite widespread
    acknowledgement that genocide should not and will
    not be tolerated, the United States and the rest
    of the world have struggled to respond for a
    variety of reasons.

9
A. The Armenian Genocide
  • Origins of the Turkish-Armenian conflict
  • How was genocide committed?
  • The response of the international community

10
B. The Nazi Holocaust
  • Origins of the Nazi persecution of Jews
  • Hitler and his Final Solution
  • The world response

11
C. The Cambodian Genocide
  • Origins of the Cambodian genocide
  • The Khmer Rouge and the Cambodian genocide
  • The world response

12
D. The Bosnian Genocide
  • Origins of Yugoslavias unrest
  • The targets of the Bosnian genocide
  • The world response

13
E. The Rwandan Genocide
  • Origins of the Tutsi-Hutu conflict
  • How was the Rwandan genocide carried out?
  • The international response

14
F. The Sudanese Genocide
  • Origins of the conflict in Sudan
  • The genocide in Darfur
  • The international response

15
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16
Part Three Individuals of Conscience
  • Armenia Ambassador Henry Morgenthau, Sr.
  • The Holocaust Paster Martin Niemoller
  • Cambodia Dith Pran and Sydney Schanberg
  • Bosnia State Department resignations
  • Rwanda Alison Des Forges and Romeo Dallaire

17
Part Four Potential U.S. Responses
  • Option 1 LEAD THE WORLD IN THE FIGHT TO STOP
    GENOCIDE
  • Option 2 STAND WITH THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY
    AGAINST GENOCIDE
  • Option 3 SPEAK OUT, BUT PRESERVE STATE
    SOVEREIGNTY
  • Option 4 INTERVENE ONLY WHEN U.S. INTERESTS ARE
    DIRECTLY THREATENED
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