
Contents
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1. Atrocity Crimes: “What’s in a Name?” 1. Atrocity Crimes: “What’s in a Name?”
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1.1. Genocide 1.1. Genocide
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1.2. Crimes against humanity 1.2. Crimes against humanity
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1.2. War crimes 1.2. War crimes
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1.3. Ethnic cleansing and the crime of aggression 1.3. Ethnic cleansing and the crime of aggression
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2. The Field: The Scattered Universe of Atrocity Studies 2. The Field: The Scattered Universe of Atrocity Studies
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3. The Handbook: Oxford Handbook on Atrocity Crimes 3. The Handbook: Oxford Handbook on Atrocity Crimes
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3.1. PART I—Atrocity crimes 3.1. PART I—Atrocity crimes
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3.2. PART II—Etiology and causes of atrocity crimes 3.2. PART II—Etiology and causes of atrocity crimes
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3.3. PART III—Actors in atrocity crimes 3.3. PART III—Actors in atrocity crimes
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3.4. PART IV—Harm and victims of atrocity crimes 3.4. PART IV—Harm and victims of atrocity crimes
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3.5. PART V—Reactions to atrocity crimes 3.5. PART V—Reactions to atrocity crimes
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3.6. PART VI—Case studies 3.6. PART VI—Case studies
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3.6.1. War crimes 3.6.1. War crimes
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3.6.2. Crimes against Humanity 3.6.2. Crimes against Humanity
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3.6.3. Genocide 3.6.3. Genocide
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References References
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Introduction: Atrocity Crimes and Atrocity Studies
Get accessBarbora Holá is Senior Researcher at the Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement (NSCR) and Associate Professor at the Department of Criminal Law and Criminology at Vrije University Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Hollie Nyseth Nzitatira is Associate Professor of Sociology at The Ohio State University. She has published over 40 articles and book chapters on genocide and mass violence, as well as how countries rebuild in the aftermath. Her two current projects funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation examine Rwanda’s gacaca courts and peoples’ reentry and reintegration following incarceration for genocide in Rwanda.
Maartje Weerdesteijn is Assistant Professor at the Department of Criminology at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the Netherlands, and a Research Fellow at the Center for International Criminal Justice.
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Published:18 March 2022
Cite
Abstract
The introduction discusses the concept of atrocity crimes and its origins. It outlines its main definitional characteristics, distinguishes and briefly describes the three main constitutive categories of atrocity crimes (genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes), and discusses similarities and differences among the three categories. The introduction also addresses the scattered state of atrocity studies as a field of academic inquiry and introduces the Handbook on Atrocity Crimes as the pioneering volume combining major theoretical and empirical research on all three categories of atrocity crimes. It subsequently provides a roadmap of individual chapters included in the Handbook.
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