Table of Contents
Part I: Scenarios of Genocide Past and Future 1. Scenarios of Genocide: Models of Genocide and Critical Responses 2. Types of Genocide and mass Murder Part II: Case Studies 3. Pol Pot's Cambodia: Was It Genocide? 4. The Soviet Gulag: Is It Genocidal? 5. The Man-Made Famine of 1933 in the Soviet Ukraine: What Happened and Why? 6. Genocide and Denial: The Armenian Case 7. What Genocide? What Holocaust? News From Turkey, 1915-23: A Case Study 8. Gypsies and Jews: Chosen People 9. Tibet: A Case of Eradication of Religion Leading to Genocide Part III: Dynamics of Genocide 10. From Holocaust to Genocides 11. Societal Madness: Impotence, Power and Genocide 12. Nuclear Insanity and Multiple Genocide 13. Genocide and Mass Destruction: A Missing Dimension in Psychopathology 14. Genocidal Mentality: Nuclear Weapons on Civilian Populations 15. Power and Powerlessness: The Jewish Experience 16. Compliance and Oblivion: Impaired Compassion in Germany for the Victims of the Holocaust 17. A Psychological Study of Gentiles Who Saved the Lives of Jews During the Holocaust 18. Linguicide: Concept and Definition Part IV: Arts, Religion and Education 19. German Expressionism Heralding Genocide and the Holocaust 20. The Search for a Language: Translating Paul Celan 21. A Critical Evaluation of the Resistance of German Protestantism to the Holocaust 22. The Holocaust and (Kiveyachol) the Liberation of the Divine Righteousness 23. Holocaust: The Pedagogy of Paradox Part V: Toward Intervention and Prevention 24. Extrajudicial Executions, International Alerts and Campaigning 25. The Bottom Line in Preventing Future Holocausts 26. The United Nations and Genocide: A Program of Action 27. Reason and Realpolitik: International Law and the Prevention of Genocide 28. From Theory to Application: Proposal for an Applied Science Approach to a Genocide Early Warning System 29. World Genocide Tribunal: A Proposal for Planetary Preventive Measures Supplementing a Genocide Early Warning System Part VI: Epilogue: The International Conference on the Holocaust and Genocide, June 1982 30. The Holocaust and its Lessons: Excerpts From the Keynote Address to the International Conference on the Holocaust and Genocide 31. Why Remember? Suffering as a Link Between Peoples 32. Round Table Discussion Following Briefing on the Conference Crisis 33. Conference Summation Panel and Round Table