After the Killing Fields: Lessons from the Cambodian GenocideBloomsbury Academic, 2005 M03 30 - 256 pages For 25 years, Cambodia's Khmer Rouge have avoided responsibility for their crimes against humanity. For 30 long years, from the late 1960s to the late 1990s, the Cambodian people suffered from a war that has no name. Arguing that this series of hostilities, which included both civil and external war, amounted to one long conflict—The Thirty Years War—Craig Etcheson demonstrates that there was one constant, churning presence that drove that conflict: the Khmer Rouge. New findings demonstrate that the death toll was approximately 2.2 million people—about half a million more than commonly believed. Detailing the struggle of coming to terms with what happened in Cambodia, Etcheson concludes that real justice is not merely elusive but may, in fact, be impossible for crimes on the scale of genocide. |
From inside the book
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... bring an end to the war through negotiations , the voters gave his party a plurality , but after he became first ... bringing 50 AFTER THE KILLING FIELDS.
... bring international legal special- ists to the Documentation Center to assemble individual criminal cases , with a view to providing support for private individuals who may wish to seek legal redress for crimes against members of their ...
... bring to justice those accused of crimes against humanity " in Cambodia . In the early years of the Clinton administration , this support was mostly in the form of financial assistance to the investigations being carried out by Yale ...
Contents
A Desperate Time | 13 |
After the Peace | 39 |
Documenting Mass Murder | 53 |
Copyright | |
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After the Killing Fields: Lessons from the Cambodian Genocide Craig Etcheson No preview available - 2005 |