After the Killing Fields: Lessons from the Cambodian Genocide
This book details the work of a unique partnership, Yale University's Cambodian Genocide Program, which laid the evidentiary basis for the forthcoming Khmer Rouge tribunal and also played a key role in the international advocacy necessary for the tribunal's creation. It presents the information collected through the Mass Grave Mapping Project of the Documentation Center of Cambodia and reveals that the pattern of killing was relatively uniform throughout the country. Despite regular denial of knowledge of the mass killing among the surviving leadership of the Khmer Rouge, Etcheson demonstrates that they were not only aware of it, but that they personally managed and directed the killing. |
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Kết quả 1-3 trong 28
In such a society, the very concept of justice appears to be nothing but an illusion — and indeed it may well be. The Peace of Westphalia in 1648 ended the Thirty Years War of an earlier century, but the price of that peace was justice; ...
It appears that a “ connection with Vietnam ” became defined as anyone who lived in Eastern Zone regions along the border with Vietnam . RECONSIDERING THE VIEWS OF KIERNAN AND LOCARD Kiernan's conclusion that a large - scale execution ...
In some cases , starvation appears to have been a Khmer Rouge method to execute large numbers of people easily and cheaply . Even so , those instances are not recorded in the mass grave data as executions per se unless the starvation ...
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Nội dung
A Desperate Time | 13 |
After the Peace | 39 |
Documenting Mass Murder | 53 |
Bản quyền | |
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Ấn bản in khác - Xem tất cả
After the Killing Fields: Lessons from the Cambodian Genocide Craig Etcheson Xem trước bị giới hạn - 2005 |
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Post-conflict Heritage, Postcolonial Tourism: Culture, Politics and ... Tim Winter Không có bản xem trước - 2007 |