the 8 stages of genocide

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The 8 Stages of Genocide

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The 8 Stages of Genocide. Stage 1. Classification. Cultures have categories that distinguish “us and them” by Ethnicity Race Religion Ex. German or Jew, Hutu or Tutsi. Classification cont. Bipolar societies lacking mixed categories are most likely to have genocide Ex. Rwanda. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The 8 Stages of Genocide

The 8 Stages of Genocide

Page 2: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Stage 1. Classification

• Cultures have categories that distinguish “us and them” by– Ethnicity– Race– Religion• Ex. German or Jew, Hutu or Tutsi

Page 3: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Classification cont.

• Bipolar societies lacking mixed categories are most likely to have genocide– Ex. Rwanda

Page 4: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Classification Prevention

• Develop universalistic institutions transcending ethnic or racial divisions– Actively promote • Tolerance• Understanding

• Promote classifications that transcend divisions

Page 5: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Stage 2. Symbolism

• Giving names or symbols to classifications– Ex. Jews, Gypsies

• Names and symbols distinguish by colors or clothing– Does not directly result in genocide unless taken to next

level• When combined with hatred– Symbols forced upon unwilling members of pariah groups

• Ex. Yellow star for Jews under Nazi rule

Page 6: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Symbolism Prevention

• Hate symbols and speech can be legally forbidden– Ex. Swastikas

• Group markings can be outlawed– Ex. Gang clothing, Tribal scarring ↘

• Legal limitations will fail if unsupported by popular culture enforcement

Page 7: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Stage 3. Dehumanization

• One group denying the humanity of another group– Ex. “Cockroaches”

• Overcomes normal human revulsion against murder

• Hate propaganda in media used to vilify the victim group

Page 8: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Dehumanization Prevention

• Incitement to genocide should not be confused with protected speech– Genocidal societies lack constitutional protection

for countervailing speech• Should be treated differently than democracies

• Local and international leaders condemn use of hate speech and make it culturally unacceptable

Page 9: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Dehumanization Prevention cont.

• Leaders who incite genocide should be banned from international travel and have foreign finances frozen

• Hate radio and propaganda should be banned• Hate crimes and atrocities should be punished

Page 10: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Stage 4. Organization

• Genocide always organized by the state using militias– Provides deniability of state responsibility• Ex. Janjaweed in Darfur

• Organization – Informally• Ex. Hindu mobs led by local RSS militants

– Decentralized• Terrorist groups

Page 11: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Organization cont.

• Special army units or militants trained and armed

• Genocidal killing plans made

Page 12: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Organization Prevention

• Membership in militias should be outlawed• Leaders should be denied international visas• U.N. should impose arms embargoes on

governments and countries involved in genocide

• Create commissions to investigate violations– Ex. Post-genocidal sanctions in Rwanda

Page 13: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Stage 5. Polarization

• Extremists drive groups apart• Hate groups broadcasting polarizing propaganda• Laws created– Ex. Forbidding intermarriage, forbidding social interaction

• Extremists target moderates– Intimidate and silence centers

• Moderates from groups are most able to stop genocide– First to be arrested and killed

Page 14: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Polarization Prevention

• Security protection for moderate leaders• Assistance to human rights groups• Seizure of assets of extremists• International visas for extremists denied• Coup d'état (overthrow) by extremists

opposed– By international sanctions

Page 15: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Stage 6. Preparation

• Identification and separation of victims because of:– Ethnic identity– Religious identity

• Death list created• Victims forced to wear identification symbol– Ex. Serial number for Jews

Page 16: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Preparation cont.• Victims segregated into ghettos

• Deported to concentration camps

• Confined to famine-struck region– starved

Page 17: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Prevention of Genocidal Preparation

• If regional alliances or U.N. security can be mobilized:– Genocide Emergency must be declared– Armed international intervention should be

prepared– Heavy assistance provided to victim group– Humanitarian assistance organized by U.N. – Private relief groups for refugees

Page 18: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Stage 7. Extermination

• Quickly becomes a killing legally called “Genocide”

• Called extermination to killers – Do not believe their victims are fully human

• Sponsored by the state– Armed forces work with militias to do the killing

Page 19: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Extermination cont.

• Genocide can result in revenge killings by groups against each other– Downward whirl-pool cycle of bilateral genocide• Ex. Burundi

• Only rapid armed intervention can stop genocide at this point

Page 20: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Extermination Prevention

• Real safe areas and refugee camps should be established– Heavily armed international protection

• Small genocides– U.N. Security Council should authorize• The U.N. Standing High Readiness Brigade• EU Rapid Response Force• Regional forces

Page 21: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Extermination Prevention cont.

• Larger interventions– Multilateral force authorized by the U.N. should

intervene• Regional alliances should act if U.N. cannot

• If strong nations will not provide troops, they should send– Airlift– Equipment– Financial help

Page 22: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Stage 8. Denial

• Surest indicator of genocidal massacre• Perpetrators of genocide– Dig up mass graves– Burn bodies– Try to cover up evidence– Try to intimidate witnesses

Page 23: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Denial cont.

• Genocidal perpetrators deny committing crime– Blaming what happened on the victims

• Block investigation of crimes• Continue to govern until forced to give up power– Flee into exile

• Remain there with impunity until captured and tribunal is established– Ex. Pol Pot, Idi Amin

Page 24: The 8 Stages of Genocide

Response to Denial

• Punishment by an international tribunal or national court– Evidence is heard– Perpetrator is punished