GLOBALIZATION AND GENOCIDALISM: FICTIONAL DISCOURSE WITHOUT BORDERS
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GLOBALIZATION AND GENOCIDALISM: FICTIONAL DISCOURSE WITHOUT BORDERS (FOR FUN AND PROFIT)
GLOBALIZATION AND GENOCIDALISM: FICTIONAL DISCOURSE WITHOUT BORDERS (FOR FUN AND PROFIT)

Author(s): Tiphaine L. Dickson, Aleksandar Jokić
Subject(s): International Law, Military history, Evaluation research, Victimology, Transformation Period (1990 - 2010), Globalization, Peace and Conflict Studies
Published by: Српско социолошко друштво
Keywords: Globalization; genocide; genocidalism; aggression; international law; criminal international tribunals; Yugoslavia; Rwanda;

Summary/Abstract: In this essay we explore the relationship between globalization and genocidalism. “Globalization” is understood as “freedom and ability of individuals and firms to initiate voluntary economic transactions with residents of other countries,” while “genocidalism” is defined as “(i) the purposeful neglect to attribute responsibility for genocide in cases when overwhelming evidence exists, and as (ii) the energetic attributions of “genocide” in less then clear cases without considering available and convincing opposing evidence and argumentation.” The hypothesis that we defend here as explanatory of globalization’s “surprising” failure to live up to its often repeated theoretical promise that it is not a “zero-sum game,” is that this apparent failure is a result of the impact of the sole super-power’s global politics. These policies are manifested through an open onslaught on the notion of state sovereignty (impacting the sovereignty of virtually all countries except that of the U.S.), and an aggressive promotion of all kinds of interventionism, in particular armed (“humanitarian”) intervention.

  • Issue Year: 40/2006
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 323-346
  • Page Count: 24
  • Language: English
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