Around the “G” Word: From Raphael Lemkin’s Definition to Current Memorial and Academic Controversies - Sciences Po Access content directly
Journal Articles Genocide Studies and Prevention Year : 2012

Around the “G” Word: From Raphael Lemkin’s Definition to Current Memorial and Academic Controversies

Abstract

The term “genocide” has generated passion and misunderstanding since its coining in 1944 by Raphael Lemkin. Applying this term to very heterogeneous historical and current situations brings up many objections and debates. The first problem arising from the word genocide concerns its uses, including its memorial, humanitarian, legal, and political purposes. Scholars are divided about its meaning. However, this article stresses that the global digital academic enterprise, Online Encyclopedia of Mass Violence, represents today a unique effort to gather the most important historical cases of mass human destruction, with respect to their own singularity, while offering a way to compare them according to the same framework of analysis. It builds a strong body of knowledge and follows a rigorous methodology, including a peer-review process. This article also brings some clarifications to three questions: the relationship of genocide studies with international law, the strong tendency in this field to qualify any massacre as genocide, and the legal relevance of the notion of crime against humanity.
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Dates and versions

hal-01475754 , version 1 (24-02-2017)
hal-01475754 , version 2 (07-11-2017)

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Jacques Sémelin. Around the “G” Word: From Raphael Lemkin’s Definition to Current Memorial and Academic Controversies. Genocide Studies and Prevention, 2012, 7 (1), pp.24 - 29. ⟨hal-01475754v1⟩
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