Full Description
There has never been a more promising time for genocide prevention. More resources and research are being focused on prevention than ever before. Yet we still lack vital knowledge as to the most effective ways to stabilise and reduce the risk of genocide in current at-risk societies. This volume offers a compelling new approach: to understand how to prevent genocide, we need to examine societies in which genocide has been prevented. It is in these societies - in which a demonstrably high risk of genocide was present, but in which genocide did not occur - that we can potentially find key factors that promote resilience to genocide. The volume explores six such case studies, spanning three continents and seven decades. Through careful analysis it identifies eleven factors that have contributed to preventing genocide in multiple cases, and which have the potential to inform current approaches to prevention. Collectively, these offer a new, evidence-based approach to preventing genocide.
Contents
1. Introduction: Evidence-Based Approaches to Genocide Prevention; 2. Denmark during the Holocaust: Jewish Survival under Nazi Rule; 3. Bulgaria during the Holocaust: An Exceptional Case; 4. East Timor's Quest for Independence: On the Brink of Genocide; 5. The Yazidis on Mt Sinjar: The Narrowest of Escapes; 6. The Baha'i in Iran: Navigating Long-Term Risk; 7. Haitians and Haitian-Dominicans in the Dominican Republic: Histories of Violence, Oppression and Resilience; 8. Conclusion: Implementing Evidence-Based Approaches to Genocide Prevention.



