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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 22 August 2013
- ISBN 9780199674626
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages286 pages
- Size 217x148x22 mm
- Weight 476 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
Offering the author's reflections on how to interpret genocide as a crime, this book endeavours to understand how the theories of criminal motivation might shed light on these stunning events and make them comprehensible, including a new and compelling account of the dynamics of the 1994 Rwanda genocide.
MoreLong description:
Positioning itself within significant developments in genocide studies arising from misgivings about two noteworthy observers, Arendt and Milgram, this book asks what lies 'beyond the banality of evil'? And suggests the answer lies within criminology.
Offering the author's reflections about how to interpret genocide as a crime, Beyond the Banality of Evil: Criminology and Genocide endeavours to understand how the theories of criminal motivation might shed light on these stunning events and make them comprehensible. While a great deal has been written about the shortcomings of the obedience paradigm and 'desk murderers' when discussing the Holocaust, little has been said of what results when investigations are taken beyond these limitations. Through examination and analysis of the literature surrounding genocide studies, Brannigan frames the events within a general theoretical approach to crime before applying his own revised model, specifically to Rwanda and drawn from field-work in 2004 and 2005. This provides a new and compelling account of the dynamics of the 1994 genocide and its distinctive attributes of speed, popularity, totality and emotional indifference.
With a focus on the disarticulation of personal culpability among ordinary perpetrators, Beyond the Banality of Evil questions the effectiveness of individual-level guilt imputation in these politically based, collectively orchestrated crimes, and raises doubts about the utility of criminal indictments that have evolved in the context of models of individual misconduct.
Beyond the Banality of Evil is a work of major consequence. It brings to bear a lifetime of thought on unspeakable crimes ignored by criminology. Brannigan's book deserves to be read time and again by those interested in concentrated evil and superb scholarship.
Table of Contents:
Genocide and the obedience paradigm
Three paradoxes of genocide in criminology
Labelling genocide: the constitutive problem
Explaining crime, explaining genocide: the control perspective
The psychogenesis and sociogenesis of genocide in Rwanda
Catalysts and accomplices
The limits of the criminal law
The civil remedy for genocide
Truth and reconciliation commissions: the third option
Conclusion: Beyond the banality of evil