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- Eight_stages_of_genocide abstract "In 1996 Gregory Stanton, the president of Genocide Watch, presented a briefing paper called The 8 Stages of Genocide at the United States Department of State. In it he suggested that genocide develops in eight stages that are "predictable but not inexorable".The Stanton paper was presented at the State Department, shortly after the Rwanda genocide and much of the analysis is based on why that genocide occurred. The preventative measures suggested, given the original target audience, were those that the United States could implement directly or use their influence on other governments to have implemented.In April 2012, it was reported that Stanton would soon be officially adding two new stages, Discrimination and Persecution, to his original theory, which would make for a 10-stage theory of genocide.In a paper for the Social Science Research Council Dirk Moses criticises the Stanton approach concluding:Other authors have focused on the structural conditions leading up to genocide and the psychological and social processes that create an evolution toward genocide. Helen Fein showed that pre-existing anti-Semitism and systems that maintained anti-Semitic policies was related to the number of Jews killed in different European countries during the Holocaust. Ervin Staub showed that economic deterioration and political confusion and disorganization were starting points of increasing discrimination and violence in many instances of genocides and mass killing. They lead to scapegoating a group and ideologies that identified that group as an enemy. A history of devaluation of the group that becomes the victim, past violence against the group that becomes the perpetrator leading to psychological wounds, authoritarian cultures and political systems, and the passivity of internal and external witnesses (bystanders) all contribute to the probability that the violence develops into genocide. Intense conflict between groups that is unresolved, becomes intractable and violent can also lead to genocide. The conditions that lead to genocide provide guidance to early prevention, such as humanizing a devalued group, creating ideologies that embrace all groups, and activating bystander responses. There is substantial research to indicate how this can be done, but information is only slowly transformed into action.M. Hassan Kakar wrote:".
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageID "42036940".
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageLength "8254".
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageOutDegree "10".
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageRevisionID "664368969".
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageWikiLink Category:Genocide_education.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageWikiLink Genocidal_massacre.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageWikiLink Genocide_Watch.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageWikiLink Genocide_denial.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageWikiLink Gregory_Stanton.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageWikiLink Hate_speech.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageWikiLink Militia.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageWikiLink Racial_integration.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageWikiLink Social_Science_Research_Council.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageWikiLink United_States_Department_of_State.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageWikiLinkText "Eight stages of genocide".
- Eight_stages_of_genocide hasPhotoCollection Eight_stages_of_genocide.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quotation.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide subject Category:Genocide_education.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide comment "In 1996 Gregory Stanton, the president of Genocide Watch, presented a briefing paper called The 8 Stages of Genocide at the United States Department of State. In it he suggested that genocide develops in eight stages that are "predictable but not inexorable".The Stanton paper was presented at the State Department, shortly after the Rwanda genocide and much of the analysis is based on why that genocide occurred.".
- Eight_stages_of_genocide label "Eight stages of genocide".
- Eight_stages_of_genocide sameAs m.0_v9g6f.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide sameAs Q17119085.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide sameAs Q17119085.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide wasDerivedFrom Eight_stages_of_genocide?oldid=664368969.
- Eight_stages_of_genocide isPrimaryTopicOf Eight_stages_of_genocide.