
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
The age-old practice of persecution has been recognised since the mid-20 th century as a crime against humanity under international law. Even so, scores of states have continued to commit this serious human rights violation, characterised by systematic discrimination against groups of people based on aspects of their identity. While acknowledging the legal aspects involved, this book emphasizes the essentially political nature of acts of state-driven discrimination on such grounds as race, language, culture and political orientation. Fifteen contemporary cases of persecution are examined to determine who discriminated against whom, why, how, when and with what outcomes. Among the examples are Indonesia, Turkey, China, Iraq, Uganda, South Africa, Israel, Zimbabwe, Croatia, Myanmar and Sri Lanka.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Section I
- Conclusion to Section I
- Section II
- Conclusion to Section II
- Section III
- Conclusion to Section III
- Section IV
- Conclusion to Section IV
- Section V
- Conclusion to Section V
- Section VI
- Overall conclusion
- Index