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History's worst atrocities rarely arrived without warning. From the genocide in Rwanda to the Holocaust and the Cambodian killing fields, survivors, journalists, and diplomats later recalled the signs—dehumanizing rhetoric, targeted legislation, escalating exclusion—that preceded mass violence. Yet those warnings were ignored, dismissed, or deliberately suppressed. This book examines the documented patterns that emerge before genocides and mass atrocities unfold, drawing on historical records, survivor testimony, and policy analyses. It traces how warning signs were identified—or failed to be—by governments, international bodies, and civil society, and explores the structural reasons why early intervention so often fell short. Grounded in case studies from the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, the book offers a rigorous framework for understanding how ordinary societies slide toward extraordinary violence. It does not sensationalize tragedy but instead foregrounds the human and institutional choices made at critical junctures. For readers seeking to understand not just what happened, but why the world so often failed to act in time, this is an essential historical reckoning.
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Liczba stron: 235
Rok wydania: 2026
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