1. What We Do and Do Not Know; 2. An Extraordinary Baseline; 3. Security: War-time Threat; 4. Threat and Opportunity: The Dangers of Freedom; 5. Opportunity II: Death of the Nation's Father; 6. Authority: Rwanda's privatized and powerful state; 7. Why some killed and others did not; 8. Conclusion: Rwanda in Retrospect.
Uses unique field data to offer a rigorous explanation of how Rwanda's genocide occurred and why Rwandans participated in it.
Omar Shahabudin McDoom is Assistant Professor of Comparative Politics in the Department of Government at the London School of Economics and Political Science. A political scientist and lawyer by training, he has been researching Rwanda's genocide since he first visited the country in 2003. He has previously held research fellowships at Harvard and Oxford universities and, prior to academia, he worked as a Policy Officer for the World Bank where his interest in the genocide originated.
'In this important and wide-reaching analysis, McDoom presents
strong empirics - including new data and analysis at the local,
regional, and national levels - to generate fresh insight into
several key aspects of the Rwandan genocide … The framings and
findings speak strongly to literatures on comparative violence and
political mobilization, as well as to political science research on
how context shapes political behavior and the political meaning of
ethnicity.' Catherine Boone, London School of Economics and
Political Science
'The product of a superb set of studies, carefully researched over
the course of a decade and dispassionately analyzed. Most novel is
McDoom's ability to reconstruct stories of what happened at the
local level in a way that adds up to a coherent picture … He
marries these close-ups to accounts of the politics at the regional
and national level … The result is to produce a number of important
new insights. Anyone serious about understanding the Rwanda
genocide needs to read this book.' Stuart J. Kaufman, University of
Delaware
'A fresh and wide-reaching analysis of the 1994 Genocide of the
Tutsi in Rwanda. With a focus that ranges from the local to
international levels and drawing on extensive original research,
McDoom explores two key questions: Why did the genocide take place,
and why did people participate? His argument will shape future
discussions not only of the Rwandan case but of comparative
genocide studies.' Timothy Longman, Boston University
'… provides fresh insights into some of the most troubling
questions concerning the genocide that killed between 512,000 and
662,000 Tutsi, including how and why the genocide occurred, and why
so many Rwandans participated in it. McDoom reflects on 25 years of
scholarship and brings fresh insights gleaned from his new
interview data.' Alex Vines, International Affairs
'an emotive, tragic, well-researched book … the book offers
critical nuances on the Rwandan genocide grounded in empirical and
theoretical interventions from a well experienced professor of
political science … scholarly, engaging, and a significant
contribution to comparative political science on conflicts,
genocides, security studies, and more importantly adding knowledge
beneficial to policy-makers, journalists, human rights advocates,
historians, and the like-minded.' Brian Maregedze, African Studies
Quarterly
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