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The Anthropology Of Genocide - WNLibrary

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84 modernity’s edges<br />

develop strategies for bringing these lessons to their students in order to give intervention<br />

and prevention a real chance in the future. Activists need to keep involving<br />

others, expanding their efforts, and confronting those who violate the rights<br />

and freedoms of indigenous peoples.<br />

<strong>The</strong> international business community needs to take further steps to develop a<br />

code of business ethics that protects the rights of people in areas where businesses<br />

are operating. Governments must live up to their obligation to protect indigenous<br />

peoples and not compromise their rights under the weight of so-called progress, economic<br />

growth, or nationalism. Finally, all institutions, whether states, corporations,<br />

nongovernment organizations, or indigenous support groups, need to work together<br />

to promote the rights not just of indigenous peoples but also of all human beings.<br />

REFERENCES CITED<br />

Adelman, Howard, and Astri Suhrke. 1996. “Early Warning and Response: Why the International<br />

Community Failed to Prevent the Rwanda <strong>Genocide</strong>.” Disasters 20(3):295–304.<br />

Africa Watch. 1989. Zimbabwe, A Break with the Past? Human Rights and Political Unity. New York<br />

and Washington, D.C.: Africa Watch Committee.<br />

———. 1990. Somalia: A Government at War with Its Own People: Testimonies about the Killings and<br />

the Conflict in the North. New York: Human Rights Watch.<br />

African Rights. 1995a. Facing <strong>Genocide</strong>: <strong>The</strong> Nuba of Sudan. London: African Rights.<br />

———. 1995b. Rwanda: Death, Despair, and Defiance. London: African Rights.<br />

———. 1996. Rwanda: Killing the Evidence: Murders, Attacks, Arrests, and Intimidation of Survivors<br />

and Witnesses. London: African Rights.<br />

———. 1999. Rwanda: <strong>The</strong> Insurgency in the Northwest. London: African Rights.<br />

Akhavan, Payyam. “Justice and Reconciliation in the Great Lakes Region of Africa: <strong>The</strong><br />

Contribution of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.” Duke Journal of Comparative<br />

and International Law 7:325–48.<br />

Albert, Bruce. 1994. “Gold Miners and Yanomami Indians in the Brazilian Amazon: <strong>The</strong><br />

Hashimu Massacre.” In Who Pays the Price? <strong>The</strong> Sociocultural Context of Environmental Crisis.<br />

Barbara Rose Johnston, ed. Pp. 47–55. Washington D.C.: Island Press.<br />

American Anthropological Association. 1991. Report of the Special Commission to Investigate the<br />

Situation of the Brazilian Yanomami, June, 1991. Washington, D.C.: American Anthropological<br />

Association.<br />

Amnesty International. 1992. Human Rights Violations against Indigenous Peoples of the Americas.<br />

New York: Amnesty International.<br />

Arens, Richard. 1978. <strong>The</strong> Forest Indians in Stroessner’s Paraguay: Survival or Extinction? Survival<br />

International Document Series, No. 4. London: Survival International.<br />

Arens, Richard, ed. 1976. <strong>Genocide</strong> in Paraguay. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.<br />

Barta, Tony. 1987. “Relations of <strong>Genocide</strong>: Land and Lives in the Colonization of Australia.”<br />

In <strong>Genocide</strong> and the Modern Age: Etiology and Case Studies of Mass Death. Isidor Walliman and<br />

Michael N. Dobkowski, eds. Pp. 237–51. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.<br />

Bay, Christian. 1984. “Human Rights on the Periphery: No Room in the Ark for the<br />

Yanomami?” Development Dialogue 1(2):23–41.

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