painting-of-hands-on-wire_eteteonline.com

Genocide

Educational Resources. Click the link(s) below to download PDF information.

  1. “GENOCIDE”—THE POWER OF A LABEL
  2. A COMMENTARY ON DAVID SCHEFFER’S CONCEPTS OF GENOCIDE AND ATROCITY CRIMES
  3. A CRITICAL EVALUATION OF INTERNATIONAL COMMISSION OF JURISTSʹ REPORT ON BANGLADESH GENOCIDE
  4. A DARK DESCENT INTO REALITY: MAKING THE CASE FOR AN OBJECTIVE DEFINITION OF TORTURE
  5. ADVANCING INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE IN AFRICA
  6. AN ACCOUNT OF THE THEORY OF GENOCIDE
  7. AN APPRAISAL IN LIGHT OF THEIR BURGEONING PUBLIC AUTHORITY
  8. AN EFFECTIVE MEASURE OF BRINGING JUSTICE
  9. APPLICATION OF THE LAW OF GENOCIDE TO THE HISTORY OF INDONESIAN CONTROL
  10. APPRAISAL OF THE ENFORCEMENT OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN SELECTED AFRICAN STATES
  11. APPRAISING UN JUSTICE-RELATED FACT-FINDING MISSIONS
  12. BYSTANDERS TO GENOCIDE
  13. CASE CONCERNING THE ARREST WARRANT OF 11 APRIL 2000 (DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO V. BELGIUM)
  14. CLASSIFICATION SYMBOLIZATION DISCRIMINATION DEHUMANIZATION ORGANIZATION
  15. CLASSIFYING ACTS AS CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY
  16. COMPARATIVE CORPORATE CRIMINAL LIABILITY
  17. CRIMES UNDER INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW
  18. DAFUR AND THE GENOCIDE DEBATE
  19. DARFUR AND GENOCIDE
  20. DARFUR GENOCIDE CHARGES FOR SUDANESE PRESIDENT OMAR AL-BASHIR
  21. DEFINING GENOCIDE – DEFINING HISTORY
  22. DEFINING GENOCIDE
  23. DO INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL TRIBUNALS DETER OR EXACERBATE HUMANITARIAN ATROCITIES
  24. ENVISIONING A GLOBAL RULE OF LAW
  25. ETHNIC CLEANSING IN PROGRESS
  26. ETHNIC CLEANSING, RECURSIVE KNOWLEDGE AND THE DILEMMAS OF SEDENTARISM
  27. ETHNIC-CLEANSING
  28. EVIDENCE FROM POST-GENOCIDE RWANDA
  29. EXPLAINING RWANDA’S 1994 GENOCIDE
  30. EXPLAINING THE ULTIMATE ESCALATION IN RWANDA
  31. FAKING GENOCIDE IN HAITI
  32. FORCED DISPLACEMENT AND INTERNATIONAL CRIMES
  33. GACACA COURTS IN RWANDA
  34. GENOCIDE AND ETHNIC CONFLICT
  35. GENOCIDE AND THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE
  36. GENOCIDE IN THE FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
  37. GENOCIDE INTERNATIONAL EFFORTS AT PUNISHMENT AND PREVENTION FROM 1993 TO 2013
  38. GENOCIDE PREVENTION IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
  39. GENOCIDE: SOME REFLECTIONS ON GENERAL PHILOSOPHICAL, ETHICAL, AND LEGAL ASPECTS OF A MOST HORRIFIC CRIME
  40. GENOCIDE, CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY
  41. GLOBAL CIVIL SOCIETY INFLUENCE ON THE STATUTE FOR AN INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT
  42. GROUP CLASSIFICATION ON NATIONAL ID CARDS AS A FACTOR IN GENOCIDE AND ETHNIC CLEANSING
  43. GROUP RIGHTS, THE INTENT ELEMENT OF GENOCIDE
  44. HOLOCAUST AND GENOCIDE TODAY
  45. HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION: ARMED FORCE USED TO STOP GRAVE ACTS OF WAR CRIMES, CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY, GENOCIDE, AND TORTURE
  46. IN THE CONTEXT OF THE CONCEPT OF “GENOCIDE
  47. INTERNATIONAL CRIMES TRIBUNAL-
  48. INTERNATIONAL CRIMES TRIBUNAL-2 (ICT-2)
  49. INTERNATIONAL CRIMES
  50. INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW – ANTONIO CASSESE
  51. INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW AS A GLOBAL LAW
  52. INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW BY OTHER MEANS
  53. INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL TRIBUNALS AND THE LEGAL IMPLICATIONS OF INTERPRETED TESTIMONY
  54. INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHT
  55. INTERNATIONAL JUSTICE, LOCAL INJUSTICE—BRANCH
  56. INTERNATIONAL LAW – A CONSTITUTION FOR MANKIND
  57. INTERVENTION TO STOP GENOCIDE AND MASS ATROCITIES
  58. IS GENOCIDE DIFFERENT
  59. JOURNAL OF GENOCIDE RESEARCH
  60. JPC.MEMORYJUSTICE.20130704
  61. JUDICIAL RESPONSES TO GENOCIDE
  62. JUST CONVICT EVERYONE
  63. JUSTICE ON WHOSE TERMS
  64. KURDISH WOMEN IN THE ZONE OF GENOCIDE
  65. LEAVE NONE TO TELL THE STORY – GENOCIDE IN RWANDA
  66. MASS ATROCITIES AND ARMED CONFLICT
  67. MINORITY RIGHTS IN KOSOVO UNDER INTERNATIONAL RULE
  68. NATIONAL PROSECUTIONS FOR INTERNATIONAL CRIMES
  69. NATIONALIZING INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW (2)
  70. NATIONALIZING INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW_THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT AS A ROVING MIXED COURT
  71. OLD AND NEW LAWS ON HISTORICAL INJUSTICES AND GENOCIDE
  72. PREVENTING FUTURE GENOCIDE AND PROTECTING REFUGEES
  73. PREVENTING GENOCIDE
  74. PROPAGANDA AND CON‡ICT-THEORY AND EVIDENCE FROM THE RWANDAN GENOCIDE
  75. PROPAGANDA IN THE RWANDAN GENOCIDE
  76. PROSECUTING THE LEADERS
  77. PROVING GENOCIDAL INTENT – INTERNATIONAL PRECEDENT AND ECCC CASE 002
  78. RAPE AND SEXUAL ASSAULT IN CHECHNYA
  79. RAPHAEL LEMKIN’S HISTORY OF GENOCIDE AND COLONIALISM
  80. RECORDING DEATH AND SURVIVAL -KAREN MARIE PETERSEN, MISSIONARY WITNESS TO GENOCIDE
  81. REINING IN IMPUNITY FOR INTERNATIONAL CRIMES AND SERIOUS VIOLATIONS OF FUNDAMENTAL HUMAN RIGHTS
  82. REMEDIES FOR WAR CRIMES AT THE NATIONAL LEVEL
  83. RETHINKING GENOCIDAL INTENT
  84. ROBBERY AGAINST HUMANITY – THE TREATMENT IN INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW
  85. RWANDA AND DARFUR – A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
  86. RWANDA
  87. SUDAN’S COURTS AND COMPLEMENTARITY IN THE FACE OF DARFUR
  88. SUPPORTING LOCAL EFFORTS TO DOCUMENT HUMAN-RIGHTS VIOLATIONS IN ARMED CONFLICT
  89. TEMPORARY COURTS, PERMANENT RECORDS
  90. THE AFRICAN UNION AND THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT
  91. THE CAMBODIAN GENOCIDE AND INTERNATIONAL LAW
  92. THE CHANGING FORMS OF INCITEMENT TO TERROR AND VIOLENCE
  93. THE COLLECTIVE DYNAMICS OF RACIAL DEHUMANIZATION AND GENOCIDAL VICTIMIZATION IN DARFUR
  94. THE CRIME OF PERSECUTION AND THE SITUATION IN DARFUR
  95. THE CURIOUS CASE OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LIABILITY
  96. THE DARFUR SITUATION BRIEF REVIEW OF THE CASE
  97. THE EIGHT STAGES OF GENOCIDE
  98. THE ENFORCEMENT OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW
  99. THE GENOCIDE CONVENTION AT FIFTY
  100. THE HOLOCAUST AND GENOCIDE IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
  101. THE HOLOCAUST AND GENOCIDE
  102. THE ILLNESS OF REASON AND CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY
  103. THE IMPACT OF DOMESTIC WAR CRIMES PROSECUTIONS1 ON INTERNATIONAL IMPUNITY
  104. THE IMPORTANCE OF ENFORCEMENT IN INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW
  105. THE INTERACTION OF NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL APPROACHES IN THE REPRESSION OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMES
  106. THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE AND THE ELEMENTS OF THE CRIME OF GENOCIDE
  107. THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT AND CONFLICT MEDIATION
  108. THE INTERNATIONAL RESPONSE TO CONFLICT AND GENOCIDE
  109. THE LAW OF UNIVERSAL CONSCIENCE – GENOCIDE AND CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY
  110. THE MYTH OF ‘INTERNATIONAL CRIMES
  111. THE POLITICS EVOLVING AROUND THE CRIME OF GENOCIDE (2)
  112. THE POLITICS EVOLVING AROUND THE CRIME OF GENOCIDE
  113. THE POLITICS OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE
  114. THE POLITICS OF NAMING GENOCIDE, CIVIL WAR, INSURGENCY
  115. THE PRINCIPLE OF COMPLEMENTARITY UNDER THE ROME STATUTE OF THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT
  116. THE PRINCIPLE OF LEGALITY IN INTERNATIONAL AND COMPARATIVE CRIMINAL LAW
  117. THE ROME STATUTE AND THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT
  118. THE STATUE OF THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT VERSUS CUSTOMARY INTERNATIONAL LAW
  119. THE TWO NOTIONS OF GENOCIDE
  120. THE UKRAINIAN FAMINE OF 1932-1933 AS GENOCIDE
  121. THE US INVESTIGATION INTO THE DARFUR CRISIS
  122. THE USE OF THE CROSS IN POST-GENOCIDE ARMENIAN PAINTINGS
  123. THESIS (2)
  124. THESIS (3)
  125. THESIS
  126. TOWARD A COMPARATIVE APPROACH TO THE CRIME OF GENOCIDE
  127. TOWARD A NEW CRIMINOLOGY OF GENOCIDE
  128. TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE AND THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT
  129. UNDERSTANDING THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT
  130. UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS
  131. US GENOCIDE IN IRAQ
  132. WAR CRIMES AND TRUTH COMMISSIONS
  133. WHAT IS A WAR CRIME
  134. WHAT IS GENOCIDE
error: Content is protected !!