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Author Bell, Andrew (Andrew Villen)

Title Ethnic cleansing / Andrew Bell-Fialkoff.

Publication Info. New York : St. Martin's Press, 1996.

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Location Call No. Status
 University of Saint Joseph: Pope Pius XII Library - Standard Shelving Location  304.8 B433E    Check Shelf
Edition First edition.
Description 346 pages : illustrations, maps ; 22 cm
Summary "Ethnic cleansing" has become one of the key terms of the fin-de-siecle. In the former territory of Yugoslavia, along the fringes of the old Soviet Empire, and in Africa whole populations are being murdered or forced from lands they have lived on for centuries. Andrew Bell-Fialkoff explains the history of this obscene practice, tracing it from antiquity to the present and showing how, in different times and places, the most varied criteria have been used to isolate and destroy previously accepted or even completely unnoticed groups. "Cleansing" has been based on race, gender, class, sexual preference, and religion and has been a constant evil in world history. The need to understand its reemergence in the wake of communism's collapse is at the center of this important book. Bell-Fialkoff also uses his analysis of this seemingly intransigent problem to offer a reasoned account of the practice of population transfer and how it could ease ethnic strife in certain situations.
Contents Introduction: What Is Population Cleansing? -- 1. Cleansing: A Historical Overview -- 2. A Typology of Cleansing -- 3. Cleansing as a Metonym of Collective Identity -- 4. Areas of Conflict: Which Ones to Choose? -- 5. Bosnia -- 6. Cyprus -- 7. Karabakh -- 8. Kosovo -- 9. The Palestinian Problem -- 10. The Russian Minorities in the Former Soviet Republics -- 11. Rwanda and Burundi -- 12. Sri Lanka -- 13. Transylvania -- 14. Ulster -- 15. Solving Irreconcilable Ethnic Conflicts -- 16. The Resettlement Index -- 17. Possible Solutions.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages [289]-332) and index.
Subject Population transfers.
Forced migration.
ISBN 0312107927
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