The Christmas Massacres

The Christmas Massacres
Author: Human Rights Watch (Organization)
Publisher: Human Rights Watch
Total Pages: 72
Release: 2009
Genre: History
ISBN: 1564324389

And recommendations -- Maps -- Background -- Attacks on civilians between September and November 2008 -- The Christmas massacres -- Life with the LRA : the children speak -- Response from the LRA -- Recent international action on the LRA -- Acknowledgements.

A Christmas to Remember

A Christmas to Remember
Author: Bushie Engelbrecht
Publisher: Hippocrene Books
Total Pages: 232
Release: 1999-01-01
Genre: Mass murder
ISBN: 9780636042124

New Directions in Genocide Research

New Directions in Genocide Research
Author: Adam Jones
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 308
Release: 2012-03-12
Genre: History
ISBN: 1136621415

This edited book seeks to capture the range of new approaches, theories and case studies in the field of genocide studies.

The Lord's Resistance Army

The Lord's Resistance Army
Author: Mareike Schomerus
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 331
Release: 2021-04-01
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1108626572

The Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) is one of Africa's most notorious armed rebel groups, having operated across Uganda, South Sudan, Sudan, the Central African Republic and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. When they entered the Juba Peace Talks with the Ugandan Government in 2006, the peace deal seemed like a gift to fighters who had for years barely been surviving in Central Africa's jungles. Yet the talks failed. Why? Based on exclusive interviews with LRA fighters and their notorious leader Joseph Kony, Mareike Schomerus provides insights into how the LRA experienced the Juba Talks, revealing developing dynamics and deep distrust within a conflict system and how these became entrenched through the peace negotiations. In so doing, Schomerus offers an explanation as to why current approaches to ending armed violence not only fail but how they actively contribute to their own failure, and calls for a new approach to contemporary peacemaking.

The Conceit of Humanitarian Intervention

The Conceit of Humanitarian Intervention
Author: Rajan Menon
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 257
Release: 2016-02-03
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0199384886

With the end of the Cold War has come an upsurge in humanitarian interventions-military campaigns aimed at ending mass atrocities. These wars of rescue, waged in the name of ostensibly universal norms of human rights and legal principles, rest on the premise that a genuine "international community" has begun to emerge and has reached consensus on a procedure for eradicating mass killings. Rajan Menon argues that, in fact, humanitarian intervention remains deeply divisive as a concept and as a policy, and is flawed besides. The advocates of humanitarian intervention have produced a mountain of writings to support their claim that human rights precepts now exert an unprecedented influence on states' foreign policies and that we can therefore anticipate a comprehensive solution to mass atrocities. In The Conceit of Humanitarian Intervention, Menon shows that this belief, while noble, is naïve. States continue to act principally based on what they regard at any given time as their national interests. Delivering strangers from oppression ranks low on their list of priorities. Indeed, even democratic states routinely embrace governments that trample the human rights values on which the humanitarian intervention enterprise rests. States' ethical commitment to waging war to end atrocities remains episodic and erratic-more rhetorical than real. And when these missions are undertaken, the strategies and means used invariably produce perverse, even dangerous results. This, in no small measure, stems from the hubris of leaders-and the acolytes of humanitarian intervention-who have come to believe that they possesses the wisdom and wherewithal to bestow freedom and stability upon societies about which they know little.