Dear reader:
With a topic as weighty as preventing genocide, we don’t pretend to do it justice in a 24+ page e-zine. What we hope to do, however, is to give readers a broader understanding of the debate—both to examine what the international community has, and hasn’t, learned about stopping genocides once they are underway and the strategies being explored to prevent them from happening.
As the Holocaust Days of Remembrance are commemorated from April 23-30, 2006, many will recall a
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With figures this staggering, how can one even begin to memorialize these innocent lives? For me, the greatest honor we can pay these many victims is to ensure that there are no more victims. In other words, how do we put the institutions and programs in place to make sure that millions more will not die on account of their race, religion, or ethnic identity? Ending impunity for war crimes is one answer and, happily, we are finally seeing more of a global trend to bring the perpetrators of atrocity crimes to justice. In the meantime, we could also use better fire brigades.
| Special thanks to our expert reviewer for this issue, Dr. Paul D. Williams of the Department of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Birmingham, U.K. |
I’m not sure how many more crises it will take before such improved systems are put in place. Until that time, there are a variety of options in the policy toolkit, including lots of carrots and sticks to use with leaders who are committing grave abuses. More optimistically perhaps, there are more efforts being made—especially by the civil society sector—to prevent conflict in the first place. The long-term work of addressing the root causes of conflict, and building communities of hope and trust, receives far less attention and far less funding, but may just be vital to ensuring that conflicts don’t spin out of control in the first place.
Zarrin T. Caldwell Editor, OneWorld Perspectives