119,99 zł
The twentieth century produced more documented cases of mass atrocity than any preceding era—yet each one unfolded against a backdrop of prior warnings, international inaction, and institutional mechanisms that failed at the critical moment. From the Armenian massacres of 1915 through the Holocaust, Cambodia, Bosnia, and Rwanda, the patterns are disturbingly consistent: early evidence ignored, bystander nations calculating strategic interest over human cost, and perpetrator regimes exploiting the gap between international rhetoric and political will. This book does not treat these events as isolated tragedies. It examines them as a connected historical record—drawing on survivor testimony, diplomatic archives, UN documentation, and the work of genocide scholars to trace what was known, when it was known, and what was done and not done in response. Each chapter reconstructs a distinct case while identifying the structural conditions that enabled it: ethnic scapegoating, state propaganda, legal dehumanization, and the systematic dismantling of protective institutions. The final section examines the international legal architecture built in genocide's aftermath—the Genocide Convention, the International Criminal Court, the Responsibility to Protect doctrine—and asks honestly how these frameworks have performed when tested. 20th Century Genocides is a work of historical accountability, written for readers who believe that understanding failure clearly is the necessary foundation for preventing its repetition.
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Liczba stron: 206
Rok wydania: 2026
