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The Laws of Genocide Prescriptions for a Just World
Thomas W. Simon
ISBN: 0-275-97945-8
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-97945-4
232 pages
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 6/30/2007
List Price: $75.00 (UK Sterling Price: £51.95)
Discount Price: $37.50 Sale Price for U.S. Customers Only. Save 50%. Ends 12/31/2009.
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Series Title: PSI Reports
Reviews:
  • Simon (Illinois State U.) presents a normative and prescriptive legal analysis of genocide. Contending that international law has wrongly modeled its treatment of genocide on national criminal law, which focuses on individual responsibility, he presents chapters providing what he views as a more accurate analysis of the different elements constituting the crime of genocide the criminal act (massive killings), criminal intent (organizational policies), motive (institutionalized hatred), victims (targeted groups defined by the perpetrator), and criminal agent (primarily organizations) and considering the implications of such analysis for reformulating international legal approaches to the crime of genocide.
    —Reference & Research Book News
    11/1/2007
  • Professional collections.
    —Choice
    4/1/2008
Description: The tools of reason offer the best hope for the international community to confront the increasing incidents of hate throughout the world. A historically informed, normative examination of the elements of the crime of genocide provides an excellent case study of how the law, reason's handmaiden, enhances understanding and improves practical ways of dealing with global injustices.

How should we confront hate? As political activists, we could resort to fighting hate with hate. As concerned citizens, we could consciously ignore or actively protest hate. As committed educators, we could put the implements and survivors of hate on display. As committed scholars, we could resuscitate the idea of evil. As humanitarian jurists, we could put individual hate-mongers on trial. Part I of this book makes a case for making the maximum use of reason to deal with hate. This means that we should actively debate those who promote hate. Further, as a close look at the history of applying law to incidents of hate and violence illustrates, the courtroom proves to be an excellent place to demonstrate the virtues of applying the tools of reason, not to global evils, but to the grave injustices of the world.

In Part II, Simon demonstrates the power of legal analysis in enhancing our understanding of genocide, probably the worst injustice imaginable. A close examination of each purported element of the crime of genocide redirects misguided turns taken by international jurists. Contrary to a more realistic perspective adopted at the Nuremberg trials, jurists have mistakenly modeled international criminal law on national criminal law, which focuses on individual responsibility. However, the cases of grave injustices throughout the 20th century amply demonstrate the primary collective responsibility underlying incidences of genocide. The failure to prosecute criminal organizations for genocide has and will continue to have disastrous results. While the Nuremberg tribunal at least disbanded the responsible Nazi organizations, current war crimes tribunals have allowed organizations responsible for the Rwandan genocide to continue to wreak havoc throughout Central Africa. If the international community cannot forge a common understanding of genocide, then it has little hope of establishing an international legal order or a global ethics.
About the Author: Thomas W. Simon a philosopher and lawyer, teaches at Illinois State University. His publications include Democracy and Social Injustice (1995) and Law & Philosophy (2000). He was a Liberal Arts Fellow at Harvard Law School and a founding faculty member of Miyazaki International College in Japan. He also has taught law in Slovenia and Kosovo. He founded and edited Injustice Studies, an electronic journal. He regularly consults for the United Nations (Working Group on Minorities) and the American Bar Association (Central/Eastern European Law Initiative). He served on a drafting committee for Albania's new constitution. As a practicing attorney, he has represented a Diaspora Rwandan group.
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