VOLUME Ⅳ THE DISCIPLINE OF GENOCIDE STUDIES 1
PART 10 Humanitarian intervention 1
72 Rethinking humanitarian intervention&BHIKHU PAREKH 3
73 From humanitarian intervention to the responsibility to protect&GARETH EVANS 29
74 Third World perspectives on humanitarian intervention and international administration&MOHAMMED AYOOB 46
75 The UN Security Council and the question of humanitarian intervention in Darfur&ALEX J.BELLAMY AND PAUL D.WILLIAMS 64
PART 11 International law and genocide prosecution 83
76 Beyond ‘realism’ and legalism: a historical perspective on the limits of International Humanitarian Law&DONALD BLOXHAM 85
77 Defeat, due process, and denial: war crimes trials and nationalist revisionism in comparative perspective&DONALD BLOXHAM 98
78 Genocide law: an education in sentimentalism&ALEXANDER ZAHAR AND GORAN SLUITER 116
79 Conspiracy in international law&JENS MEIERHENRICH 166
80 The Jelisic case and the mens rea of the crime of genocide&WILLIAM A.SCHABAS 185
81 Defining rape internationakky: a comment on Akayesu&CATHARINE A.MSCKINNON 200
PART 12 Trauma and recovery after genocide 219
82 Violence, victimhood and the language of silence&VEENA DAS AND ASHIS NANDY 221
83 When the subaltern speak: memory of genocide in colonial Libya, 1929 to 1933&ALI ABDULLATIF AHMIDA 240
84 Memory, identity and community in Rwanda&TIMOTHY LONGMAN AND THEONESTE RUTAGENGWA 259
85 The sacrificed and the sanctified&IDITH ZERTAL 279
86 Commemorating “the deportation” in post-Soviet Chechnya:the role of memorialization and collective memory in the 1994—1996 and 1999—2000 Russo-Chechen Wars&BRIAN GLYN WILLIAMS 319
87 Excavations of the heart: healing fragmented communities&VICTORIA SANFORD 347
88 The intimacy of terror: gender and the violence of 1965—66 in Bali&LESLIE DWYER 363
Index 388