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Why Not Kill Them All?
A Problem from Hell
A01=Clark McCauley
A01=Daniel Chirot
Adolf Hitler
Anti-imperialism
Assassination
Author_Clark McCauley
Author_Daniel Chirot
Category=NHTZ
Civil society
Collective punishment
Confiscation
Cowardice
Crime
Crime against peace
Cycle of violence
Death squad
Dehumanization
Democide
Dictatorship
Disgust
Dismemberment
Enemy of the state
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Ethnic cleansing
Ethnic group
European wars of religion
Extremism
Fraud
Genocidal massacre
Hatred
Heresy
Homosexuality
Hostility
Hypocrisy
Ideology
Incest taboo
Institution
Just war theory
Looting
Mass murder
Monopoly on violence
Muslims (nationality)
Mutilation
My Lai Massacre
Nanking Massacre
Narcissism
Nazism
On Killing
Partition of India
Persecution
Pollution
Prejudice
Protest
Punishment
Purge
Racism
Religious war
Reprisal
Resentment
Sabotage
Satan
Shame
Slavery
Strategic bombing
Terrorism
Torture
Totalitarianism
Tutsi
Un-American
Violence
War
Warfare
World War I
World War II
Yugoslav Wars
Product details
- ISBN 9780691145945
- Weight: 397g
- Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 21 Jul 2010
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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Genocide, mass murder, massacres. The words themselves are chilling, evoking images of the slaughter of countless innocents. What dark impulses lurk in our minds that even today can justify the eradication of thousands and even millions of unarmed human beings caught in the crossfire of political, cultural, or ethnic hostilities? This question lies at the heart of Why Not Kill Them All? Cowritten by historical sociologist Daniel Chirot and psychologist Clark McCauley, the book goes beyond exploring the motives that have provided the psychological underpinnings for genocidal killings. It offers a historical and comparative context that adds up to a causal taxonomy of genocidal events. Rather than suggesting that such horrors are the product of abnormal or criminal minds, the authors emphasize the normality of these horrors: killing by category has occurred on every continent and in every century. But genocide is much less common than the imbalance of power that makes it possible. Throughout history human societies have developed techniques aimed at limiting intergroup violence.
Incorporating ethnographic, historical, and current political evidence, this book examines the mechanisms of constraint that human societies have employed to temper partisan passions and reduce carnage. Might an understanding of these mechanisms lead the world of the twenty-first century away from mass murder? Why Not Kill Them All? makes clear that there are no simple solutions, but that progress is most likely to be made through a combination of international pressures, new institutions and laws, and education. If genocide is to become a grisly relic of the past, we must fully comprehend the complex history of violent conflict and the struggle between hatred and tolerance that is waged in the human heart. In a new preface, the authors discuss recent mass violence and reaffirm the importance of education and understanding in the prevention of future genocides.
Daniel Chirot is the Job and Gertrud Tamaki Professor of International Studies and professor of sociology at the University of Washington. Clark McCauley is the Rachel C. Hale Professor of Science and Mathematics and codirector of the Solomon Asch Center for Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict at Bryn Mawr College, and founding editor of "Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict: Pathways toward Terrorism and Genocide".
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