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E-raamat: New Age of Genocide: Intellectual and Political Challenges after Gaza

(University of Sussex)
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Agenda Publishing
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781788218757
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Oct-2025
  • Kirjastus: Agenda Publishing
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781788218757

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With recent events in Gaza, Martin Shaw seeks to restore the idea of genocide to its central place in thinking about mass atrocities, to apply it to neglected cases, and ultimately to settle the question of ‘What is genocide’?

The Israeli destruction of Gaza has returned the idea of genocide to the centre of world politics, with sharp conflicts between protesters and international lawyers who invoke it and Western governments and media that deny it.


The idea has now been part of global politics and intellectual life for eighty years, but attitudes to it have waxed and waned according to political circumstances and intellectual fashion, with its meaning becoming unclear and contested. Recently, influential thinkers have argued that the term has become redundant.


This book, by the foremost sociological theorist of genocide, defends the concept and argues that in the current period it is urgent to make it more coherent, restoring it to a central place in thinking about mass atrocities. Examining genocide in Gaza, in the Russian attempt to eliminate Ukraine, and the longer histories of Palestine and British complicity, together with the problem of ‘political groups’ as targets, this book brings the debate up to date and is essential reading for all concerned with the problem.

Arvustused

In his compelling new book, Martin Shaw argues that the destruction of Gaza and Ukraine in different ways indicate that genocide is 'returning to the centre of a brutal new constellation of world politics'. A pioneering scholar of war and genocide, he shows how and why the pursuit of permanent security drives the mass destruction of civilian populations and their cultures. -- A. Dirk Moses, author of The Problems of Genocide Martin Shaw was one of the first to recognise genocide in Gaza. His book relates it to the larger structures of genocide in Palestine and the wider world. With this work, Shaw charts new pathways for understanding genocide through both sociological and legal lenses an endeavor urgent now more than ever. By deepening and contextualizing our collective grasp of what genocide is, Shaw invites us to confront its meaning in our own time. The Israeli genocide in Gaza, like every atrocity of its kind, leaves wounds no one may be able to fully heal: every life lost is a loss for humanity itself. Yet it is precisely in the face of such devastations atrocities we have failed to prevent and stop that scholars must probe the broader significance of these crimes, equipping us with insight and, perhaps, with tools to face the future, as Shaw does. -- Francesca Albanese, UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territories This is a sharply written and most welcome new contribution on the multiple new genocides of the 21st century... Shaw makes highly perceptive observations... with a thoughtful defense of the genocide concept, against those misguided scholars who seek to discard it. Instead he advocates reclaiming it and using it in new ways. -- Journal of Peace Research

1. The return of the genocide idea



PART I Twenty-First Century Genocide



2. Genocide in history and in our time



3. Dynamics of war and genocide in Ukraine



PART II Gaza and the Structure of Genocide in Palestine



4. The Gaza War-Genocide



5. The structure of genocide in Palestine



PART III Conceptual and Historical Challenges



6. In defence of the genocide idea: a critique of Dirk Moses



7. Political groups, class and genocide



8. Britain and genocide: structures of complicity



Conclusion: theses on genocide thought and action after Gaza
Martin Shaw is Emeritus Professor of International Relations and Politics at the University of Sussex and Research Professor at the Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals. He has written widely on global politics, war and genocide.