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Ethnic cleansing

Ethnic cleansing is the systematic forced removal of ethnic, racial, and religious groups from a given area, with the intent of making a region ethnically homogeneous. Along with direct removal, extermination, deportation or population transfer, it also includes indirect methods aimed at forced migration by coercing the victim group to flee and preventing its return, such as murder, rape, and property destruction.[2][3][4] It constitutes a crime against humanity and may also fall under the Genocide Convention, even as ethnic cleansing has no legal definition under international criminal law.[2][5][6]

Refugees at Taurus Pass during the Armenian genocide. The Ottoman government aimed to reduce the number of Armenians below 5–10% of the population in any part of the empire, which necessarily entailed the elimination of a million Armenians.[1]

Many instances of ethnic cleansing have occurred throughout history; the term was first used by the perpetrators as a euphemism during the Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s. Since then, the term has gained widespread acceptance due to journalism and the media's heightened use of the term in its generic meaning.[7]

Etymology

 
The Alhambra Decree (1492), that ordered the expulsion of Jews from Spain, was an early example of ethnic cleansing, in this case an ethno-religious group. (Painting of Emilio Sala Francés, 1889)

An antecedent to the term is the Greek word andrapodismos (ἀνδραποδισμός; lit. "enslavement"), which was used in ancient texts. e.g., to describe atrocities that accompanied Alexander the Great's conquest of Thebes in 335 BC.[8] In the early 1900s, regional variants of the term could be found among the Czechs (očista), the Poles (czystki etniczne), the French (épuration) and the Germans (Säuberung).[9][page needed] A 1913 Carnegie Endowment report condemning the actions of all participants in the Balkan Wars contained various new terms to describe brutalities committed toward ethnic groups.[10]

 
Expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia following the end of World War II

During World War II, the euphemism čišćenje terena ("cleansing the terrain") was used by the Croatian Ustaše to describe military actions in which non-Croats were purposely killed or otherwise uprooted from their homes.[11] Viktor Gutić, a senior Ustaše leader, was one of the first Croatian nationalists on record to use the term as a euphemism for committing atrocities against Serbs.[12] The term was later used in the internal memorandums of Serbian Chetniks in reference to a number of retaliatory massacres they committed against Bosniaks and Croats between 1941 and 1945.[13] The Russian phrase очистка границ (ochistka granits; lit. "cleansing of borders") was used in Soviet documents of the early 1930s to refer to the forced resettlement of Polish people from the 22-kilometre (14 mi) border zone in the Byelorussian and Ukrainian SSRs.[citation needed] This process of the population transfer in the Soviet Union was repeated on an even larger scale in 1939–1941, involving many other groups suspected of disloyalty.[14] During the Holocaust, Nazi Germany pursued a policy of ensuring that Europe was "cleaned of Jews" (judenrein).[15] The Nazi Generalplan Ost called for the genocide and ethnic cleansing of most Slavic people in central and eastern Europe for the purpose of providing more living space for the Germans.[16]

 
Exhumed victims of the Srebrenica massacre, part of the ethnic cleansing in the Bosnian War

In its complete form, the term appeared for the first time in the Romanian language (purificare etnică) in an address by Vice Prime Minister Mihai Antonescu to cabinet members in July 1941. After the beginning of the invasion by the Soviet Union,[clarification needed] he concluded: "I do not know when the Romanians will have such chance for ethnic cleansing."[17] In the 1980s, the Soviets used the term "ethnic cleansing" to describe the inter-ethnic violence in Nagorno-Karabakh.[8] At around the same time, the Yugoslav media used it to describe what they alleged was an Albanian nationalist plot to force all Serbs to leave Kosovo. It was widely popularized by the Western media during the Bosnian War (1992–1995).

In 1992, the German equivalent of ethnic cleansing (German: ethnische Säuberung, pronounced [ˈʔɛtnɪʃə ˈzɔɪ̯bəʁʊŋ] ( listen)) was named German Un-word of the Year by the Gesellschaft für deutsche Sprache due to its euphemistic, inappropriate nature.[18]

Definitions

The Final Report of the Commission of Experts established pursuant to Security Council Resolution 780 defined ethnic cleansing as "a purposeful policy designed by one ethnic or religious group to remove by violent and terror-inspiring means the civilian population of another ethnic or religious group from certain geographic areas".[19] In its previous, first interim report it noted, "based on the many reports describing the policy and practices conducted in the former Yugoslavia, [that] 'ethnic cleansing' has been carried out by means of murder, torture, arbitrary arrest and detention, extra-judicial executions, rape and sexual assaults, confinement of civilian population in ghetto areas, forcible removal, displacement and deportation of civilian population, deliberate military attacks or threats of attacks on civilians and civilian areas, and wanton destruction of property. Those practices constitute crimes against humanity and can be assimilated to specific war crimes. Furthermore, such acts could also fall within the meaning of the Genocide Convention."[20]

The official United Nations definition of ethnic cleansing is "rendering an area ethnically homogeneous by using force or intimidation to remove from a given area persons of another ethnic or religious group."[21] As a category, ethnic cleansing encompasses a continuum or spectrum of policies. In the words of Andrew Bell-Fialkoff, "ethnic cleansing ... defies easy definition. At one end it is virtually indistinguishable from forced emigration and population exchange while at the other it merges with deportation and genocide. At the most general level, however, ethnic cleansing can be understood as the expulsion of a population from a given territory."[22]

Terry Martin has defined ethnic cleansing as "the forcible removal of an ethnically defined population from a given territory" and as "occupying the central part of a continuum between genocide on one end and nonviolent pressured ethnic emigration on the other end."[14]

Gregory Stanton, the founder of Genocide Watch, has criticised the rise of the term and its use for events that he feels should be called "genocide": because "ethnic cleansing" has no legal definition, its media use can detract attention from events that should be prosecuted as genocide.[23][24]

As a crime under international law

There is no international treaty that specifies a specific crime of ethnic cleansing;[25] however, ethnic cleansing in the broad sense—the forcible deportation of a population—is defined as a crime against humanity under the statutes of both the International Criminal Court (ICC) and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY).[26] The gross human rights violations integral to stricter definitions of ethnic cleansing are treated as separate crimes falling under public international law of crimes against humanity and in certain circumstances genocide.[27] There are also situations, such as the expulsion of Germans after World War II, where ethnic cleansing has taken place without legal redress (see Preussische Treuhand v. Poland). Timothy v. Waters argues that similar ethnic cleansing could go unpunished in the future.[28]

 
A group of Bosniaks from the Lašva Valley close by Travnik, Bosnia and Herzegovina that were recently kicked out of their homes and villages by Croat forces. Once all the Bosniaks from the local areas were rounded up, the Serbs and Croats would systematically drive Bosniaks out of their villages and burn down all of their homes and possessions in a classic case of ethnic cleansing to ensure that the Bosniaks would not be able to return to the areas with a mixed population.

Causes

 
Massacres of Poles in Volhynia in 1943. Most Poles of Volhynia had either been murdered or had fled the area.

According to Michael Mann, in The Dark Side of Democracy (2004), murderous ethnic cleansing is strongly related to the creation of democracies. He argues that murderous ethnic cleansing is due to the rise of nationalism, which associates citizenship with a specific ethnic group. Democracy, therefore, is tied to ethnic and national forms of exclusion. Nevertheless, it is not democratic states that are more prone to commit ethnic cleansing, because minorities tend to have constitutional guarantees. Neither are stable authoritarian regimes (except the nazi and communist regimes) which are likely perpetrators of murderous ethnic cleansing, but those regimes that are in process of democratization. Ethnic hostility appears where ethnicity overshadows social classes as the primordial system of social stratification. Usually, in deeply divided societies, categories such as class and ethnicity are deeply intertwined, and when an ethnic group is seen as oppressor or exploitative of the other, serious ethnic conflict can develop. Michael Mann holds that when two ethnic groups claim sovereignty over the same territory and can feel threatened, their differences can lead to severe grievances and danger of ethnic cleansing. The perpetration of murderous ethnic cleansing tends to occur in unstable geopolitical environments and in contexts of war. As ethnic cleansing requires high levels of organisation and is usually directed by states or other authoritative powers, perpetrators are usually state powers or institutions with some coherence and capacity, not failed states as it is generally perceived. The perpetrator powers tend to get support by core constituencies that favour combinations of nationalism, statism and violence.[29]

Genocide

 
Armenian genocide victims

Ethnic cleansing has been described as part of a continuum of violence whose most extreme form is genocide, where the perpetrator's goal is the destruction of the targeted group. Ethnic cleansing is similar to forced deportation or population transfer whereas genocide is the attempt to destroy part or all of a particular ethnic, racial, religious, or national group. While ethnic cleansing and genocide may share the same goal and the acts which are used to perpetrate both crimes may often resemble each other, ethnic cleansing is intended to displace a persecuted population from a given territory, while genocide is intended to destroy a group.[30][31]

Some academics consider genocide to be a subset of "murderous ethnic cleansing".[32] As Norman Naimark writes, these concepts are different but related, for "literally and figuratively, ethnic cleansing bleeds into genocide, as mass murder is committed in order to rid the land of a people".[33] William Schabas adds, "Ethnic cleansing is also a warning sign of genocide to come. Genocide is the last resort of the frustrated ethnic cleanser."[30] Sociologist Martin Shaw has criticized distinguishing between ethnic cleansing and genocide as he believes that both ultimately result in the destruction of a group though coercive violence.[34][a]

As a military, political, and economic tactic

 

The foibe massacres, or simply "the foibe", refers to mass killings both during and after World War II, mainly committed by Yugoslav Partisans and OZNA in the then-Italian territories[b] of Julian March (Karst Region and Istria), Kvarner and Dalmatia also against the local ethnic Italian population (Istrian Italians and Dalmatian Italians).[35][36] The type of attack was state terrorism[35] and ethnic cleansing against Italians.[35][36][37][38][39] The foibe massacres were followed by the Istrian–Dalmatian exodus, which was the post-World War II exodus and departure of between 230,000 and 350,000 of local ethnic Italians (Istrian Italians and Dalmatian Italians) towards Italy, and in smaller numbers, towards the Americas, Australia and South Africa.[40][41] From 1947, after the war, they were subject by Yugoslav authorities to less violent forms of intimidation, such as nationalization, expropriation, and discriminatory taxation,[42] which gave them little option other than emigration.[43][44][45] In 1953, there were 36,000 declared Italians in Yugoslavia, just about 16% of the original Italian population before World War II.[46] According to the census organized in Croatia in 2001 and that organized in Slovenia in 2002, the Italians who remained in the former Yugoslavia amounted to 21,894 people (2,258 in Slovenia and 19,636 in Croatia).[47][48]

When enforced as part of a political settlement, as happened with the expulsion of Germans after World War II through the forced resettlement of ethnic Germans to Germany in its reduced borders after 1945, the forced population movements, constituting a type of ethnic cleansing, may contribute to long-term stability of a post-conflict nation.[49][page needed] Some justifications may be made as to why the targeted group will be moved in the conflict resolution stages, as in the case of the ethnic Germans, some individuals of the large German population in Czechoslovakia and prewar Poland had encouraged Nazi jingoism before World War II, but this was forcibly resolved.[49][page needed]

Instances

In many cases, the side perpetrating the alleged ethnic cleansing and its allies have fiercely disputed the charge. Ethnic cleansing is usually accompanied by efforts to remove physical and cultural evidence of the targeted group in the territory through the destruction of homes, social centers, farms, and infrastructure, as well as through the desecration of monuments, cemeteries, and places of worship.[citation needed]

Mutual ethnic cleansing

Mutual ethnic cleansing occurs when two groups commit ethnic cleansing against minority members of the other group within their own territories. For instance in the 1920s, Turkey expelled its Greek minority and Greece expelled its Turkish minority following the Greco-Turkish War.[50] Other examples of mutual ethnic cleansings include the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict[51] and the demographic transfers of Germans, Poles and Ukrainians after World War II.[52]

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ "How could ‘forced deportation’ ever be achieved without extreme coercion, indeed violence? How, indeed, could deportation not be forced? How could people not resist? How could it not involve the destruction of a community, of the way of life that a group has enjoyed over a period of time? How could those who deported a group not intend this destruction? In what significant way is the forcible removal of a population from their homeland different from the destruction’ of a group? If the boundary between ‘cleansing’ and genocide is unreal, why police it?"[34]
  2. ^ Successively lost by Italy to Yugoslavia after the Treaty of Peace (1947)

Notes

  1. ^ Akçam, Taner (2011). "Demographic Policy and the Annihilation of the Armenians". The Young Turks' Crime Against Humanity: The Armenian Genocide and Ethnic Cleansing in the Ottoman Empire. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-15333-9. The thesis being proposed here is that the Armenian Genocide was not implemented solely as demographic engineering, but also as destruction and annihilation, and that the 5 to 10 percent principle was decisive in achieving this goal. Care was taken so that the number of Armenians deported to Syria, and those who remained behind, would not exceed 5 to 10 percent of the population of the places in which they were found. Such a result could be achieved only through annihilation... According to official Ottoman statistics, it was necessary to reduce the prewar population of 1.3 million Armenians to approximately 200,000.
  2. ^ a b "Ethnic cleansing". United Nations. United Nations Office on Genocide Prevention and the Responsibility to Protect. Retrieved December 20, 2020.
  3. ^ Walling, Carrie Booth (2000). "The history and politics of ethnic cleansing". The International Journal of Human Rights. 4 (3–4): 47–66. doi:10.1080/13642980008406892. S2CID 144001685. Most frequently, however, the aim of ethnic cleansing is to expel the despised ethnic group through either indirect coercion or direct force, and to ensure that return is impossible. Terror is the fundamental method used to achieve this end.
    Methods of indirect coercion can include: introducing repressive laws and discriminatory measures designed to make minority life difficult; the deliberate failure to prevent mob violence against ethnic minorities; using surrogates to inflict violence; the destruction of the physical infrastructure upon which minority life depends; the imprisonment of male members of the ethnic group; threats to rape female members, and threats to kill. If ineffective, these indirect methods are often escalated to coerced emigration, where the removal of the ethnic group from the territory is pressured by physical force. This typically includes physical harassment and the expropriation of property. Deportation is an escalated form of direct coercion in that the forcible removal of 'undesirables' from the state's territory is organised, directed and carried out by state agents. The most serious of the direct methods, excluding genocide, is murderous cleansing, which entails the brutal and often public murder of some few in order to compel flight of the remaining group members.13 Unlike during genocide, when murder is intended to be total and an end in itself, murderous cleansing is used as a tool towards the larger aim of expelling survivors from the territory. The process can be made complete by revoking the citizenship of those who emigrate or flee.
  4. ^ Schabas, William A. (2003). "'Ethnic Cleansing' and Genocide: Similarities and Distinctions". European Yearbook of Minority Issues Online. 3 (1): 109–128. doi:10.1163/221161104X00075. The Commission considered techniques of ethnic cleansing to include murder, torture, arbitrary arrest and detention, extrajudicial executions, sexual assault, confinement of civilian populations in ghetto areas, forcible removal, displacement and deportation of civilian populations, deliberate military attacks or threats of attacks on civilians and civilian areas, and wanton destruction of property.
  5. ^ Jones, Adam (2012). "'Ethnic cleansing' and genocide". Crimes Against Humanity: A Beginner's Guide. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-78074-146-8.
  6. ^ Schabas, William A. (2003). "'Ethnic Cleansing' and Genocide: Similarities and Distinctions". European Yearbook of Minority Issues Online. 3 (1): 109–128. doi:10.1163/221161104X00075. 'Ethnic cleansing' is probably better described as a popular or journalistic expression, with no recognized legal meaning in a technical sense... 'ethnic cleansing' is equivalent to deportation,' a grave breach of the Geneva Conventions as well as a crime against humanity, and therefore a crime within the jurisdiction of the Tribunal.
  7. ^ Thum 2010, p. 75: way. Despite its euphemistic character and its origin in the language of the perpetrators, 'ethnic cleansing' is now the widely accepted scholarly term used to describe the systematic and violent removal of undesired ethnic groups from a given territory.
  8. ^ a b Booth Walling, Carrie (2012). "The History and Politics of Ethnic Cleansing". In Booth, Ken (ed.). The Kosovo Tragedy: The Human Rights Dimensions. London: Routledge. p. 48. ISBN 978-1-13633-476-4.
  9. ^ Ther, Philipp (2004). "The Spell of the Homogeneous Nation State: Structural Factors and Agents of Ethnic Cleansing". In Munz, Rainer; Ohliger, Rainer (eds.). Diasporas and Ethnic Migrants: Germany, Israel and Russia in Comparative Perspective. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-13575-938-4. from the original on January 26, 2020. Retrieved August 31, 2017.
  10. ^ Akhund, Nadine (December 31, 2012). "The Two Carnegie Reports: From the Balkan Expedition of 1913 to the Albanian Trip of 1921". Balkanologie. Revue d'études pluridisciplinaires. XIVb (1–2). doi:10.4000/balkanologie.2365. from the original on April 4, 2017. Retrieved April 3, 2017 – via balkanologie.revues.org.
  11. ^ Toal, Gerard; Dahlman, Carl T. (2011). Bosnia Remade: Ethnic Cleansing and Its Reversal. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-19-973036-0. from the original on July 6, 2014. Retrieved March 1, 2016.
  12. ^ West, Richard (1994). Tito and the Rise and Fall of Yugoslavia. New York: Carroll & Graf. p. 93. ISBN 978-0-7867-0332-6.
  13. ^ Becirevic, Edina (2014). Genocide on the River Drina. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. pp. 22–23. ISBN 978-0-3001-9258-2. from the original on January 26, 2020. Retrieved August 31, 2017.
  14. ^ a b Martin, Terry (1998). "The Origins of Soviet Ethnic Cleansing" July 24, 2019, at the Wayback Machine. The Journal of Modern History 70 (4), 813–861. pg. 822
  15. ^ Fulbrooke, Mary (2004). A Concise History of Germany. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 197. ISBN 978-0-52154-071-1. from the original on January 26, 2020. Retrieved August 31, 2017.
  16. ^ Eichholtz, Dietrich (September 2004). "'Generalplan Ost' zur Versklavung osteuropäischer Völker" ['General Plan East' for the enslavement of Eastern European peoples]. Utopie Kreativ (in German). 167: 800–808 – via Rosa Luxemburg Foundation.
  17. ^ Petrovic, Vladimir (2017). Ethnopolitical Temptations Reach Southeastern Europe: Wartime Policy Papers of Vasa Čubrilović and Sabin Manuilă. CEU Press.
  18. ^ Gunkel, Christoph (October 31, 2010). "Ein Jahr, ein (Un-)Wort!" [One year, one (un)word!]. Spiegel Online (in German). from the original on May 12, 2013. Retrieved February 17, 2013.
  19. ^ "Final Report of the Commission of Experts Established Pursuant to United Nations Security Council Resolution 780 (1992)" (PDF). United Nations Security Council. May 27, 1994. p. 33. from the original on May 14, 2011. Retrieved May 25, 2020. Upon examination of reported information, specific studies and investigations, the Commission confirms its earlier view that 'ethnic cleansing' is a purposeful policy designed by one ethnic or religious group to remove by violent and terror-inspiring means the civilian population of another ethnic or religious group from certain geographic areas. To a large extent, it is carried out in the name of misguided nationalism, historic grievances and a powerful driving sense of revenge. This purpose appears to be the occupation of territory to the exclusion of the purged group or groups. This policy and the practices of warring factions are described separately in the following paragraphs. Paragraph 130.
  20. ^ "Final Report of the Commission of Experts Established Pursuant to United Nations Security Council Resolution 780 (1992)" (PDF). United Nations Security Council. May 27, 1994. p. 33. from the original on May 14, 2011. Retrieved May 25, 2020. Paragraph 129
  21. ^ Hayden, Robert M. (1996) "Schindler's Fate: Genocide, Ethnic Cleansing, and Population Transfers" April 11, 2016, at the Wayback Machine. Slavic Review 55 (4), 727–48.
  22. ^ Andrew Bell-Fialkoff, "A Brief History of Ethnic Cleansing" February 3, 2004, at the Wayback Machine, Foreign Affairs 72 (3): 110, Summer 1993. Retrieved May 20, 2006.
  23. ^ Blum, Rony; Stanton, Gregory H.; Sagi, Shira; Richter, Elihu D. (2007). "'Ethnic cleansing' bleaches the atrocities of genocide". European Journal of Public Health. 18 (2): 204–209. doi:10.1093/eurpub/ckm011. PMID 17513346.
  24. ^ Douglas Singleterry (April 2010), "Ethnic Cleansing and Genocidal Intent: A Failure of Judicial Interpretation?", Genocide Studies and Prevention 5, 1
  25. ^ Ferdinandusse, Ward (2004). (PDF). The European Journal of International Law. 15 (5): 1042, note 7. doi:10.1093/ejil/15.5.1041. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 5, 2008.
  26. ^ "Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court" January 13, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, Article 7; Updated Statute of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia August 6, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, Article 5.
  27. ^ Shraga, Daphna; Zacklin, Ralph (2004). . The European Journal of International Law. 15 (3). Archived from the original on September 27, 2007.
  28. ^ Timothy V. Waters, "On the Legal Construction of Ethnic Cleansing" November 6, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, Paper 951, 2006, University of Mississippi School of Law. Retrieved on 2006, 12–13
  29. ^ [1] May 3, 2020, at the Wayback Machine, Mann, Michael (2005), The Dark Side of Democracy: Explaining Ethnic Cleansing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, Ch. 1 “The Argument,” pp. 1-33.
  30. ^ a b Schabas, William (2000). Genocide in International Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 199–201. ISBN 9780521787901. from the original on January 2, 2016. Retrieved October 29, 2015.
  31. ^ Ethnic cleansing versus genocide:
    • Lieberman, Benjamin (2010). "'Ethnic cleansing' versus genocide?". In Bloxham, Donald; Moses, A. Dirk (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Genocide Studies. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-923211-6. Explaining the relationship between ethnic cleansing and genocide has caused controversy. Ethnic cleansing shares with genocide the goal of achieving purity but the two can differ in their ultimate aims: ethnic cleansing seeks the forced removal of an undesired group or groups where genocide pursues the group's 'destruction'. Ethnic cleansing and genocide therefore fall along a spectrum of violence against groups with genocide lying on the far end of the spectrum.
    • Martin, Terry (1998). "The Origins of Soviet Ethnic Cleansing". The Journal of Modern History. 70 (4): 813–861. doi:10.1086/235168. ISSN 0022-2801. JSTOR 10.1086/235168. When murder itself becomes the primary goal, it is typically called genocide... Ethnic cleansing is probably best understood as occupying the central part of a continuum between genocide on one end and nonviolent pressured ethnic emigration on the other end. Given this continuum, there will always be ambiguity as to when ethnic cleansing shades into genocide
    • Schabas, William A. (2003). "'Ethnic Cleansing' and Genocide: Similarities and Distinctions". European Yearbook of Minority Issues Online. 3 (1): 109–128. doi:10.1163/221161104X00075. The crime of genocide is aimed at the intentional destruction of an ethnic group. 'Ethnic cleansing' would seem to be targeted at something different, the expulsion of a group with a view to encouraging or at least tolerating its survival elsewhere. Yet ethnic cleansing may well have the effect of rendering the continued existence of a group impossible, thereby effecting its destruction. In other words, forcible deportation may achieve the same result as extermination camps.
    • Walling, Carrie Booth (2000). "The history and politics of ethnic cleansing". The International Journal of Human Rights. 4 (3–4): 47–66. doi:10.1080/13642980008406892. S2CID 144001685. These methods are a part of a wider continuum ranging from genocide at one extreme to emigration under pressure at the other... It is important - politically and legally - to distinguish between genocide and ethnic cleansing. The goal of the former is extermination: the complete annihilation of an ethnic, national or racial group. It contains both a physical element (acts such as murder) and a mental element (those acts are undertaken to destroy, in whole or in part, the said group). Ethnic cleansing involves population expulsions, sometimes accompanied by murder, but its aim is consolidation of power over territory, not the destruction of a complete people.
    • Naimark, Norman M. (2002). Fires of Hatred. Harvard University Press. pp. 2–5. ISBN 978-0-674-00994-3. A new term was needed because ethnic cleansing and genocide two different activities, and the differences between them are important. As in the case of determining first-degree murder, intentionality is a critical distinction. Genocide is the intentional killing off of part or all of an ethnic, religious, or national group; the murder of a people or peoples (in German, Völkermord) is the objective. The intention of ethnic cleansing is to remove a people and often all traces of them from a concrete territory. The goal, in other words, is to get rid of the "alien" nationality, ethnic, or religious group and to seize control of the territory it had formerly inhabited. At one extreme of its spectrum, ethnic cleansing is closer to forced deportation or what has been called "population transfer"; the idea is to get people to move, and the means are meant to be legal and semi-legal. At the other extreme, however, ethnic cleansing and genocide are distinguishable only by the ultimate intent. Here, both literally and figuratively, ethnic cleansing bleeds into genocide, as mass murder is committed in order to rid the land of a people.
    • Hayden, Robert M. (1996). "Schindler's Fate: Genocide, Ethnic Cleansing, and Population Transfers". Slavic Review. 55 (4): 727–748. doi:10.2307/2501233. ISSN 0037-6779. JSTOR 2501233. S2CID 232725375. Hitler wanted the Jews utterly exterminated, not simply driven from particular places. Ethnic cleansing, on the other hand, involves removals rather than extermination and is not exceptional but rather common in particular circumstances.
  32. ^ Mann, Michael (2005). The Dark Side of Democracy: Explaining Ethnic Cleansing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 17. ISBN 9780521538541. from the original on January 2, 2016. Retrieved October 29, 2015.
  33. ^ Naimark, Norman (November 4, 2007). . Online Encyclopedia of Mass Violence. Archived from the original on March 6, 2016.
  34. ^ a b Shaw, Martin (2015b), What is Genocide, Polity Press, ISBN 978-0-7456-8706-3 ‘Cleansing’ and genocide.
  35. ^ a b c Ota Konrád; Boris Barth; Jaromír Mrňka, eds. (2021). Collective Identities and Post-War Violence in Europe, 1944–48. Springer International Publishing. p. 20. ISBN 9783030783860.
  36. ^ a b Bloxham, Donald; Dirk Moses, Anthony (2011). "Genocide and ethnic cleansing". In Bloxham, Donald; Gerwarth, Robert (eds.). Political Violence in Twentieth-Century Europe. Cambridge University Press. p. 125. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511793271.004. ISBN 9781107005037.
  37. ^ Silvia Ferreto Clementi. "La pulizia etnica e il manuale Cubrilovic" (in Italian). Retrieved February 15, 2015.
  38. ^ «....Già nello scatenarsi della prima ondata di cieca violenza in quelle terre, nell'autunno del 1943, si intrecciarono giustizialismo sommario e tumultuoso, parossismo nazionalista, rivalse sociali e un disegno di sradicamento della presenza italiana da quella che era, e cessò di essere, la Venezia Giulia. Vi fu dunque un moto di odio e di furia sanguinaria, e un disegno annessionistico slavo, che prevalse innanzitutto nel Trattato di pace del 1947, e che assunse i sinistri contorni di una "pulizia etnica". Quel che si può dire di certo è che si consumò - nel modo più evidente con la disumana ferocia delle foibe - una delle barbarie del secolo scorso.» from the official website of The Presidency of the Italian Republic, Giorgio Napolitano, official speech for the celebration of "Giorno del Ricordo" Quirinal, Rome, 10 February 2007.
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  50. ^ Pinxten, Rik; Dikomitis, Lisa (May 1, 2009). When God Comes to Town: Religious Traditions in Urban Contexts. Berghahn Books. ISBN 978-1-84545-920-8. Retrieved December 31, 2021.
  51. ^ Cornell, Svante E. (September 1998). "Religion as a factor in Caucasian conflicts". Civil Wars. 1 (3): 46–64. doi:10.1080/13698249808402381. ISSN 1369-8249.
  52. ^ Snyder, Timothy (July 11, 2004). The Reconstruction of Nations: Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania, Belarus, 1569-1999. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10586-5. Retrieved December 31, 2021.

References

  • Bell-Fialkoff, Andrew (1993). . Foreign Affairs. 72 (3): 110–121. doi:10.2307/20045626. JSTOR 20045626. Archived from the original on February 3, 2004.
  • Petrovic, Drazen (1998). "Ethnic Cleansing – An Attempt at Methodology" (PDF). European Journal of International Law. 5 (4): 817.
  • Thum, Gregor (2010). "Review: Ethnic Cleansing in Eastern Europe after 1945". Contemporary European History. 19 (1): 75–81. doi:10.1017/S0960777309990257. S2CID 145605508.
  • Vladimir Petrović (2007), Etnicizacija čišćenja u reči i nedelu (Ethnicisation of Cleansing), Hereticus 1/2007, 11–36

Further reading

  • Anderson, Gary Clayton (2014). Ethnic Cleansing and the Indian: The Crime That Should Haunt America (First ed.). University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0806144214. LCCN 2013024354. OCLC 851285610. OL 31150659M.
  • Anderson, Gary Clayton. 2005. The Conquest of Texas : Ethnic Cleansing in the Promised Land 1820-1875. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 9780806136981
  • de Zayas, Alfred M.: Nemesis at Potsdam, Routledge, London 1977.
  • de Zayas, Alfred M.: A Terrible Revenge. Palgrave/Macmillan, New York, 1994. ISBN 1-4039-7308-3.
  • de Zayas, Alfred (1 February 2007). Die deutschen Vertriebenen - Keine Täter sondern Opfer: Hintergründe, Tatsachen, Folgen [The German expellees - not perpetrators but victims: background, facts, consequences] (in German). ARES Verlag. ISBN 978-3902475152. LCCN 2006502139. OCLC 71328804. OL 16302134M.
  • de Zayas, Alfred M.: Heimatrecht ist Menschenrecht. Universitas, München 2001. ISBN 3-8004-1416-3.
  • de Zayas, Alfred (10 December 1995) [1995-09-01]. "The right to one's homeland, ethnic cleansing, and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia". Criminal Law Forum. 6 (2): 257–314. doi:10.1007/BF01097769. ISSN 1046-8374. LCCN 2007233703. OCLC 223314674. S2CID 144513680.
  • de Zayas, Alfred M.: "Forced Population Transfer" in Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law, Oxford online 2010.
  • Carmichael, Cathie (2002). Ethnic cleansing in the Balkans: nationalism and the destruction of tradition (Illustrated ed.). Routledge. ISBN 0-415-27416-8.
  • Douglas, R. M.: Orderly and Humane: The Expulsion of the Germans after the Second World War. Yale University Press, 2012 ISBN 978-0300166606.
  • Kamusella, Tomasz. 2018. Ethnic Cleansing During the Cold War: The Forgotten 1989 Expulsion of Turks from Communist Bulgaria (Ser: Routledge Studies in Modern European History). London: Routledge, 328pp. ISBN 9781138480520.
  • Prauser, Steffen and Rees, Arfon: The Expulsion of the "German" Communities from Eastern Europe at the End of the Second Century. Florence, Italy, European University Institute, 2004.
  • Sundhaussen, Holm (2010). "Forced Ethnic Migration". European History Online.
  • Štrbac, Savo (2015). Gone with the Storm: A Chronicle of Ethnic Cleansing of Serbs from Croatia. Knin-Banja Luka-Beograd: Grafid, DIC Veritas. ISBN 9789995589806.

External links

  • Photojournalist's Account – Images of ethnic cleansing in Sudan
  • Timothy V. Waters, On the Legal Construction of Ethnic Cleansing, Paper 951, 2006, University of Mississippi School of Law (PDF)
  • May 31, 2007, World Science
  • Repa, Jan (March 29, 1999). "Ethnic cleansing: Revival of an old tradition". BBC News.

ethnic, cleansing, other, uses, disambiguation, systematic, forced, removal, ethnic, racial, religious, groups, from, given, area, with, intent, making, region, ethnically, homogeneous, along, with, direct, removal, extermination, deportation, population, tran. For other uses see Ethnic cleansing disambiguation Ethnic cleansing is the systematic forced removal of ethnic racial and religious groups from a given area with the intent of making a region ethnically homogeneous Along with direct removal extermination deportation or population transfer it also includes indirect methods aimed at forced migration by coercing the victim group to flee and preventing its return such as murder rape and property destruction 2 3 4 It constitutes a crime against humanity and may also fall under the Genocide Convention even as ethnic cleansing has no legal definition under international criminal law 2 5 6 Refugees at Taurus Pass during the Armenian genocide The Ottoman government aimed to reduce the number of Armenians below 5 10 of the population in any part of the empire which necessarily entailed the elimination of a million Armenians 1 Many instances of ethnic cleansing have occurred throughout history the term was first used by the perpetrators as a euphemism during the Yugoslav Wars in the 1990s Since then the term has gained widespread acceptance due to journalism and the media s heightened use of the term in its generic meaning 7 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Definitions 2 1 As a crime under international law 3 Causes 4 Genocide 5 As a military political and economic tactic 6 Instances 6 1 Mutual ethnic cleansing 7 See also 8 Explanatory notes 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology Edit The Alhambra Decree 1492 that ordered the expulsion of Jews from Spain was an early example of ethnic cleansing in this case an ethno religious group Painting of Emilio Sala Frances 1889 An antecedent to the term is the Greek word andrapodismos ἀndrapodismos lit enslavement which was used in ancient texts e g to describe atrocities that accompanied Alexander the Great s conquest of Thebes in 335 BC 8 In the early 1900s regional variants of the term could be found among the Czechs ocista the Poles czystki etniczne the French epuration and the Germans Sauberung 9 page needed A 1913 Carnegie Endowment report condemning the actions of all participants in the Balkan Wars contained various new terms to describe brutalities committed toward ethnic groups 10 Expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia following the end of World War II During World War II the euphemism ciscenje terena cleansing the terrain was used by the Croatian Ustase to describe military actions in which non Croats were purposely killed or otherwise uprooted from their homes 11 Viktor Gutic a senior Ustase leader was one of the first Croatian nationalists on record to use the term as a euphemism for committing atrocities against Serbs 12 The term was later used in the internal memorandums of Serbian Chetniks in reference to a number of retaliatory massacres they committed against Bosniaks and Croats between 1941 and 1945 13 The Russian phrase ochistka granic ochistka granits lit cleansing of borders was used in Soviet documents of the early 1930s to refer to the forced resettlement of Polish people from the 22 kilometre 14 mi border zone in the Byelorussian and Ukrainian SSRs citation needed This process of the population transfer in the Soviet Union was repeated on an even larger scale in 1939 1941 involving many other groups suspected of disloyalty 14 During the Holocaust Nazi Germany pursued a policy of ensuring that Europe was cleaned of Jews judenrein 15 The Nazi Generalplan Ost called for the genocide and ethnic cleansing of most Slavic people in central and eastern Europe for the purpose of providing more living space for the Germans 16 Exhumed victims of the Srebrenica massacre part of the ethnic cleansing in the Bosnian War In its complete form the term appeared for the first time in the Romanian language purificare etnică in an address by Vice Prime Minister Mihai Antonescu to cabinet members in July 1941 After the beginning of the invasion by the Soviet Union clarification needed he concluded I do not know when the Romanians will have such chance for ethnic cleansing 17 In the 1980s the Soviets used the term ethnic cleansing to describe the inter ethnic violence in Nagorno Karabakh 8 At around the same time the Yugoslav media used it to describe what they alleged was an Albanian nationalist plot to force all Serbs to leave Kosovo It was widely popularized by the Western media during the Bosnian War 1992 1995 In 1992 the German equivalent of ethnic cleansing German ethnische Sauberung pronounced ˈʔɛtnɪʃe ˈzɔɪ beʁʊŋ listen was named German Un word of the Year by the Gesellschaft fur deutsche Sprache due to its euphemistic inappropriate nature 18 Definitions EditThe Final Report of the Commission of Experts established pursuant to Security Council Resolution 780 defined ethnic cleansing as a purposeful policy designed by one ethnic or religious group to remove by violent and terror inspiring means the civilian population of another ethnic or religious group from certain geographic areas 19 In its previous first interim report it noted based on the many reports describing the policy and practices conducted in the former Yugoslavia that ethnic cleansing has been carried out by means of murder torture arbitrary arrest and detention extra judicial executions rape and sexual assaults confinement of civilian population in ghetto areas forcible removal displacement and deportation of civilian population deliberate military attacks or threats of attacks on civilians and civilian areas and wanton destruction of property Those practices constitute crimes against humanity and can be assimilated to specific war crimes Furthermore such acts could also fall within the meaning of the Genocide Convention 20 The official United Nations definition of ethnic cleansing is rendering an area ethnically homogeneous by using force or intimidation to remove from a given area persons of another ethnic or religious group 21 As a category ethnic cleansing encompasses a continuum or spectrum of policies In the words of Andrew Bell Fialkoff ethnic cleansing defies easy definition At one end it is virtually indistinguishable from forced emigration and population exchange while at the other it merges with deportation and genocide At the most general level however ethnic cleansing can be understood as the expulsion of a population from a given territory 22 Terry Martin has defined ethnic cleansing as the forcible removal of an ethnically defined population from a given territory and as occupying the central part of a continuum between genocide on one end and nonviolent pressured ethnic emigration on the other end 14 Gregory Stanton the founder of Genocide Watch has criticised the rise of the term and its use for events that he feels should be called genocide because ethnic cleansing has no legal definition its media use can detract attention from events that should be prosecuted as genocide 23 24 As a crime under international law Edit There is no international treaty that specifies a specific crime of ethnic cleansing 25 however ethnic cleansing in the broad sense the forcible deportation of a population is defined as a crime against humanity under the statutes of both the International Criminal Court ICC and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia ICTY 26 The gross human rights violations integral to stricter definitions of ethnic cleansing are treated as separate crimes falling under public international law of crimes against humanity and in certain circumstances genocide 27 There are also situations such as the expulsion of Germans after World War II where ethnic cleansing has taken place without legal redress see Preussische Treuhand v Poland Timothy v Waters argues that similar ethnic cleansing could go unpunished in the future 28 A group of Bosniaks from the Lasva Valley close by Travnik Bosnia and Herzegovina that were recently kicked out of their homes and villages by Croat forces Once all the Bosniaks from the local areas were rounded up the Serbs and Croats would systematically drive Bosniaks out of their villages and burn down all of their homes and possessions in a classic case of ethnic cleansing to ensure that the Bosniaks would not be able to return to the areas with a mixed population Causes Edit Massacres of Poles in Volhynia in 1943 Most Poles of Volhynia had either been murdered or had fled the area According to Michael Mann in The Dark Side of Democracy 2004 murderous ethnic cleansing is strongly related to the creation of democracies He argues that murderous ethnic cleansing is due to the rise of nationalism which associates citizenship with a specific ethnic group Democracy therefore is tied to ethnic and national forms of exclusion Nevertheless it is not democratic states that are more prone to commit ethnic cleansing because minorities tend to have constitutional guarantees Neither are stable authoritarian regimes except the nazi and communist regimes which are likely perpetrators of murderous ethnic cleansing but those regimes that are in process of democratization Ethnic hostility appears where ethnicity overshadows social classes as the primordial system of social stratification Usually in deeply divided societies categories such as class and ethnicity are deeply intertwined and when an ethnic group is seen as oppressor or exploitative of the other serious ethnic conflict can develop Michael Mann holds that when two ethnic groups claim sovereignty over the same territory and can feel threatened their differences can lead to severe grievances and danger of ethnic cleansing The perpetration of murderous ethnic cleansing tends to occur in unstable geopolitical environments and in contexts of war As ethnic cleansing requires high levels of organisation and is usually directed by states or other authoritative powers perpetrators are usually state powers or institutions with some coherence and capacity not failed states as it is generally perceived The perpetrator powers tend to get support by core constituencies that favour combinations of nationalism statism and violence 29 Genocide Edit Armenian genocide victims Ethnic cleansing has been described as part of a continuum of violence whose most extreme form is genocide where the perpetrator s goal is the destruction of the targeted group Ethnic cleansing is similar to forced deportation or population transfer whereas genocide is the attempt to destroy part or all of a particular ethnic racial religious or national group While ethnic cleansing and genocide may share the same goal and the acts which are used to perpetrate both crimes may often resemble each other ethnic cleansing is intended to displace a persecuted population from a given territory while genocide is intended to destroy a group 30 31 Some academics consider genocide to be a subset of murderous ethnic cleansing 32 As Norman Naimark writes these concepts are different but related for literally and figuratively ethnic cleansing bleeds into genocide as mass murder is committed in order to rid the land of a people 33 William Schabas adds Ethnic cleansing is also a warning sign of genocide to come Genocide is the last resort of the frustrated ethnic cleanser 30 Sociologist Martin Shaw has criticized distinguishing between ethnic cleansing and genocide as he believes that both ultimately result in the destruction of a group though coercive violence 34 a As a military political and economic tactic Edit Foibe massacres victims The foibe massacres or simply the foibe refers to mass killings both during and after World War II mainly committed by Yugoslav Partisans and OZNA in the then Italian territories b of Julian March Karst Region and Istria Kvarner and Dalmatia also against the local ethnic Italian population Istrian Italians and Dalmatian Italians 35 36 The type of attack was state terrorism 35 and ethnic cleansing against Italians 35 36 37 38 39 The foibe massacres were followed by the Istrian Dalmatian exodus which was the post World War II exodus and departure of between 230 000 and 350 000 of local ethnic Italians Istrian Italians and Dalmatian Italians towards Italy and in smaller numbers towards the Americas Australia and South Africa 40 41 From 1947 after the war they were subject by Yugoslav authorities to less violent forms of intimidation such as nationalization expropriation and discriminatory taxation 42 which gave them little option other than emigration 43 44 45 In 1953 there were 36 000 declared Italians in Yugoslavia just about 16 of the original Italian population before World War II 46 According to the census organized in Croatia in 2001 and that organized in Slovenia in 2002 the Italians who remained in the former Yugoslavia amounted to 21 894 people 2 258 in Slovenia and 19 636 in Croatia 47 48 When enforced as part of a political settlement as happened with the expulsion of Germans after World War II through the forced resettlement of ethnic Germans to Germany in its reduced borders after 1945 the forced population movements constituting a type of ethnic cleansing may contribute to long term stability of a post conflict nation 49 page needed Some justifications may be made as to why the targeted group will be moved in the conflict resolution stages as in the case of the ethnic Germans some individuals of the large German population in Czechoslovakia and prewar Poland had encouraged Nazi jingoism before World War II but this was forcibly resolved 49 page needed Instances EditFor a more comprehensive list see List of ethnic cleansing campaigns In many cases the side perpetrating the alleged ethnic cleansing and its allies have fiercely disputed the charge Ethnic cleansing is usually accompanied by efforts to remove physical and cultural evidence of the targeted group in the territory through the destruction of homes social centers farms and infrastructure as well as through the desecration of monuments cemeteries and places of worship citation needed Mutual ethnic cleansing Edit Mutual ethnic cleansing occurs when two groups commit ethnic cleansing against minority members of the other group within their own territories For instance in the 1920s Turkey expelled its Greek minority and Greece expelled its Turkish minority following the Greco Turkish War 50 Other examples of mutual ethnic cleansings include the Nagorno Karabakh conflict 51 and the demographic transfers of Germans Poles and Ukrainians after World War II 52 See also EditMain article Outline of Genocide studies Genocide portalPopulation cleansing Classicide Communal violence Democide Ethnic violence Ethnocide Forced displacement Genocide Genocidal massacre Identity cleansing Linguicide List of wars and anthropogenic disasters by death toll Monoethnicity Politicide Population transfer Religious cleansing Social cleansingExplanatory notes Edit How could forced deportation ever be achieved without extreme coercion indeed violence How indeed could deportation not be forced How could people not resist How could it not involve the destruction of a community of the way of life that a group has enjoyed over a period of time How could those who deported a group not intend this destruction In what significant way is the forcible removal of a population from their homeland different from the destruction of a group If the boundary between cleansing and genocide is unreal why police it 34 Successively lost by Italy to Yugoslavia after the Treaty of Peace 1947 Notes Edit Akcam Taner 2011 Demographic Policy and the Annihilation of the Armenians The Young Turks Crime Against Humanity The Armenian Genocide and Ethnic Cleansing in the Ottoman Empire Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 15333 9 The thesis being proposed here is that the Armenian Genocide was not implemented solely as demographic engineering but also as destruction and annihilation and that the 5 to 10 percent principle was decisive in achieving this goal Care was taken so that the number of Armenians deported to Syria and those who remained behind would not exceed 5 to 10 percent of the population of the places in which they were found Such a result could be achieved only through annihilation According to official Ottoman statistics it was necessary to reduce the prewar population of 1 3 million Armenians to approximately 200 000 a b Ethnic cleansing United Nations United Nations Office on Genocide Prevention and the Responsibility to Protect Retrieved December 20 2020 Walling Carrie Booth 2000 The history and politics of ethnic cleansing The International Journal of Human Rights 4 3 4 47 66 doi 10 1080 13642980008406892 S2CID 144001685 Most frequently however the aim of ethnic cleansing is to expel the despised ethnic group through either indirect coercion or direct force and to ensure that return is impossible Terror is the fundamental method used to achieve this end Methods of indirect coercion can include introducing repressive laws and discriminatory measures designed to make minority life difficult the deliberate failure to prevent mob violence against ethnic minorities using surrogates to inflict violence the destruction of the physical infrastructure upon which minority life depends the imprisonment of male members of the ethnic group threats to rape female members and threats to kill If ineffective these indirect methods are often escalated to coerced emigration where the removal of the ethnic group from the territory is pressured by physical force This typically includes physical harassment and the expropriation of property Deportation is an escalated form of direct coercion in that the forcible removal of undesirables from the state s territory is organised directed and carried out by state agents The most serious of the direct methods excluding genocide is murderous cleansing which entails the brutal and often public murder of some few in order to compel flight of the remaining group members 13 Unlike during genocide when murder is intended to be total and an end in itself murderous cleansing is used as a tool towards the larger aim of expelling survivors from the territory The process can be made complete by revoking the citizenship of those who emigrate or flee Schabas William A 2003 Ethnic Cleansing and Genocide Similarities and Distinctions European Yearbook of Minority Issues Online 3 1 109 128 doi 10 1163 221161104X00075 The Commission considered techniques of ethnic cleansing to include murder torture arbitrary arrest and detention extrajudicial executions sexual assault confinement of civilian populations in ghetto areas forcible removal displacement and deportation of civilian populations deliberate military attacks or threats of attacks on civilians and civilian areas and wanton destruction of property Jones Adam 2012 Ethnic cleansing and genocide Crimes Against Humanity A Beginner s Guide Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 78074 146 8 Schabas William A 2003 Ethnic Cleansing and Genocide Similarities and Distinctions European Yearbook of Minority Issues Online 3 1 109 128 doi 10 1163 221161104X00075 Ethnic cleansing is probably better described as a popular or journalistic expression with no recognized legal meaning in a technical sense ethnic cleansing is equivalent to deportation a grave breach of the Geneva Conventions as well as a crime against humanity and therefore a crime within the jurisdiction of the Tribunal Thum 2010 p 75 way Despite its euphemistic character and its origin in the language of the perpetrators ethnic cleansing is now the widely accepted scholarly term used to describe the systematic and violent removal of undesired ethnic groups from a given territory a b Booth Walling Carrie 2012 The History and Politics of Ethnic Cleansing In Booth Ken ed The Kosovo Tragedy The Human Rights Dimensions London Routledge p 48 ISBN 978 1 13633 476 4 Ther Philipp 2004 The Spell of the Homogeneous Nation State Structural Factors and Agents of Ethnic Cleansing In Munz Rainer Ohliger Rainer eds Diasporas and Ethnic Migrants Germany Israel and Russia in Comparative Perspective London Routledge ISBN 978 1 13575 938 4 Archived from the original on January 26 2020 Retrieved August 31 2017 Akhund Nadine December 31 2012 The Two Carnegie Reports From the Balkan Expedition of 1913 to the Albanian Trip of 1921 Balkanologie Revue d etudes pluridisciplinaires XIVb 1 2 doi 10 4000 balkanologie 2365 Archived from the original on April 4 2017 Retrieved April 3 2017 via balkanologie revues org Toal Gerard Dahlman Carl T 2011 Bosnia Remade Ethnic Cleansing and Its Reversal New York Oxford University Press p 3 ISBN 978 0 19 973036 0 Archived from the original on July 6 2014 Retrieved March 1 2016 West Richard 1994 Tito and the Rise and Fall of Yugoslavia New York Carroll amp Graf p 93 ISBN 978 0 7867 0332 6 Becirevic Edina 2014 Genocide on the River Drina New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press pp 22 23 ISBN 978 0 3001 9258 2 Archived from the original on January 26 2020 Retrieved August 31 2017 a b Martin Terry 1998 The Origins of Soviet Ethnic Cleansing Archived July 24 2019 at the Wayback Machine The Journal of Modern History 70 4 813 861 pg 822 Fulbrooke Mary 2004 A Concise History of Germany Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 197 ISBN 978 0 52154 071 1 Archived from the original on January 26 2020 Retrieved August 31 2017 Eichholtz Dietrich September 2004 Generalplan Ost zur Versklavung osteuropaischer Volker General Plan East for the enslavement of Eastern European peoples Utopie Kreativ in German 167 800 808 via Rosa Luxemburg Foundation Petrovic Vladimir 2017 Ethnopolitical Temptations Reach Southeastern Europe Wartime Policy Papers of Vasa Cubrilovic and Sabin Manuilă CEU Press Gunkel Christoph October 31 2010 Ein Jahr ein Un Wort One year one un word Spiegel Online in German Archived from the original on May 12 2013 Retrieved February 17 2013 Final Report of the Commission of Experts Established Pursuant to United Nations Security Council Resolution 780 1992 PDF United Nations Security Council May 27 1994 p 33 Archived from the original on May 14 2011 Retrieved May 25 2020 Upon examination of reported information specific studies and investigations the Commission confirms its earlier view that ethnic cleansing is a purposeful policy designed by one ethnic or religious group to remove by violent and terror inspiring means the civilian population of another ethnic or religious group from certain geographic areas To a large extent it is carried out in the name of misguided nationalism historic grievances and a powerful driving sense of revenge This purpose appears to be the occupation of territory to the exclusion of the purged group or groups This policy and the practices of warring factions are described separately in the following paragraphs Paragraph 130 Final Report of the Commission of Experts Established Pursuant to United Nations Security Council Resolution 780 1992 PDF United Nations Security Council May 27 1994 p 33 Archived from the original on May 14 2011 Retrieved May 25 2020 Paragraph 129 Hayden Robert M 1996 Schindler s Fate Genocide Ethnic Cleansing and Population Transfers Archived April 11 2016 at the Wayback Machine Slavic Review 55 4 727 48 Andrew Bell Fialkoff A Brief History of Ethnic Cleansing Archived February 3 2004 at the Wayback Machine Foreign Affairs 72 3 110 Summer 1993 Retrieved May 20 2006 Blum Rony Stanton Gregory H Sagi Shira Richter Elihu D 2007 Ethnic cleansing bleaches the atrocities of genocide European Journal of Public Health 18 2 204 209 doi 10 1093 eurpub ckm011 PMID 17513346 Douglas Singleterry April 2010 Ethnic Cleansing and Genocidal Intent A Failure of Judicial Interpretation Genocide Studies and Prevention 5 1 Ferdinandusse Ward 2004 The Interaction of National and International Approaches in the Repression of International Crimes PDF The European Journal of International Law 15 5 1042 note 7 doi 10 1093 ejil 15 5 1041 Archived from the original PDF on July 5 2008 Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court Archived January 13 2008 at the Wayback Machine Article 7 Updated Statute of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia Archived August 6 2009 at the Wayback Machine Article 5 Shraga Daphna Zacklin Ralph 2004 The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia The European Journal of International Law 15 3 Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Timothy V Waters On the Legal Construction of Ethnic Cleansing Archived November 6 2018 at the Wayback Machine Paper 951 2006 University of Mississippi School of Law Retrieved on 2006 12 13 1 Archived May 3 2020 at the Wayback Machine Mann Michael 2005 The Dark Side of Democracy Explaining Ethnic Cleansing Cambridge Cambridge University Press Ch 1 The Argument pp 1 33 a b Schabas William 2000 Genocide in International Law Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 199 201 ISBN 9780521787901 Archived from the original on January 2 2016 Retrieved October 29 2015 Ethnic cleansing versus genocide Lieberman Benjamin 2010 Ethnic cleansing versus genocide In Bloxham Donald Moses A Dirk eds The Oxford Handbook of Genocide Studies Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 923211 6 Explaining the relationship between ethnic cleansing and genocide has caused controversy Ethnic cleansing shares with genocide the goal of achieving purity but the two can differ in their ultimate aims ethnic cleansing seeks the forced removal of an undesired group or groups where genocide pursues the group s destruction Ethnic cleansing and genocide therefore fall along a spectrum of violence against groups with genocide lying on the far end of the spectrum Martin Terry 1998 The Origins of Soviet Ethnic Cleansing The Journal of Modern History 70 4 813 861 doi 10 1086 235168 ISSN 0022 2801 JSTOR 10 1086 235168 When murder itself becomes the primary goal it is typically called genocide Ethnic cleansing is probably best understood as occupying the central part of a continuum between genocide on one end and nonviolent pressured ethnic emigration on the other end Given this continuum there will always be ambiguity as to when ethnic cleansing shades into genocide Schabas William A 2003 Ethnic Cleansing and Genocide Similarities and Distinctions European Yearbook of Minority Issues Online 3 1 109 128 doi 10 1163 221161104X00075 The crime of genocide is aimed at the intentional destruction of an ethnic group Ethnic cleansing would seem to be targeted at something different the expulsion of a group with a view to encouraging or at least tolerating its survival elsewhere Yet ethnic cleansing may well have the effect of rendering the continued existence of a group impossible thereby effecting its destruction In other words forcible deportation may achieve the same result as extermination camps Walling Carrie Booth 2000 The history and politics of ethnic cleansing The International Journal of Human Rights 4 3 4 47 66 doi 10 1080 13642980008406892 S2CID 144001685 These methods are a part of a wider continuum ranging from genocide at one extreme to emigration under pressure at the other It is important politically and legally to distinguish between genocide and ethnic cleansing The goal of the former is extermination the complete annihilation of an ethnic national or racial group It contains both a physical element acts such as murder and a mental element those acts are undertaken to destroy in whole or in part the said group Ethnic cleansing involves population expulsions sometimes accompanied by murder but its aim is consolidation of power over territory not the destruction of a complete people Naimark Norman M 2002 Fires of Hatred Harvard University Press pp 2 5 ISBN 978 0 674 00994 3 A new term was needed because ethnic cleansing and genocide two different activities and the differences between them are important As in the case of determining first degree murder intentionality is a critical distinction Genocide is the intentional killing off of part or all of an ethnic religious or national group the murder of a people or peoples in German Volkermord is the objective The intention of ethnic cleansing is to remove a people and often all traces of them from a concrete territory The goal in other words is to get rid of the alien nationality ethnic or religious group and to seize control of the territory it had formerly inhabited At one extreme of its spectrum ethnic cleansing is closer to forced deportation or what has been called population transfer the idea is to get people to move and the means are meant to be legal and semi legal At the other extreme however ethnic cleansing and genocide are distinguishable only by the ultimate intent Here both literally and figuratively ethnic cleansing bleeds into genocide as mass murder is committed in order to rid the land of a people Hayden Robert M 1996 Schindler s Fate Genocide Ethnic Cleansing and Population Transfers Slavic Review 55 4 727 748 doi 10 2307 2501233 ISSN 0037 6779 JSTOR 2501233 S2CID 232725375 Hitler wanted the Jews utterly exterminated not simply driven from particular places Ethnic cleansing on the other hand involves removals rather than extermination and is not exceptional but rather common in particular circumstances Mann Michael 2005 The Dark Side of Democracy Explaining Ethnic Cleansing Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 17 ISBN 9780521538541 Archived from the original on January 2 2016 Retrieved October 29 2015 Naimark Norman November 4 2007 Theoretical Paper Ethnic Cleansing Online Encyclopedia of Mass Violence Archived from the original on March 6 2016 a b Shaw Martin 2015b What is Genocide Polity Press ISBN 978 0 7456 8706 3 Cleansing and genocide a b c Ota Konrad Boris Barth Jaromir Mrnka eds 2021 Collective Identities and Post War Violence in Europe 1944 48 Springer International Publishing p 20 ISBN 9783030783860 a b Bloxham Donald Dirk Moses Anthony 2011 Genocide and ethnic cleansing In Bloxham Donald Gerwarth Robert eds Political Violence in Twentieth Century Europe Cambridge University Press p 125 doi 10 1017 CBO9780511793271 004 ISBN 9781107005037 Silvia Ferreto Clementi La pulizia etnica e il manuale Cubrilovic in Italian Retrieved February 15 2015 Gia nello scatenarsi della prima ondata di cieca violenza in quelle terre nell autunno del 1943 si intrecciarono giustizialismo sommario e tumultuoso parossismo nazionalista rivalse sociali e un disegno di sradicamento della presenza italiana da quella che era e cesso di essere la Venezia Giulia Vi fu dunque un moto di odio e di furia sanguinaria e un disegno annessionistico slavo che prevalse innanzitutto nel Trattato di pace del 1947 e che assunse i sinistri contorni di una pulizia etnica Quel che si puo dire di certo e che si consumo nel modo piu evidente con la disumana ferocia delle foibe una delle barbarie del secolo scorso from the official website of The Presidency of the Italian Republic Giorgio Napolitano official speech for the celebration of Giorno del Ricordo Quirinal Rome 10 February 2007 Il giorno del Ricordo Croce Rossa Italiana in Italian a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Il Giorno del Ricordo in Italian Retrieved October 16 2021 L esodo giuliano dalmata e quegli italiani in fuga che nacquero due volte in Italian February 5 2019 Retrieved January 24 2023 Pamela Ballinger April 7 2009 Genocide Truth Memory and Representation p 295 ISBN 978 0822392361 Retrieved December 30 2015 Tesser L May 14 2013 Ethnic Cleansing and the European Union Page 136 Lynn Tesser ISBN 9781137308771 Ballinger Pamela 2003 History in Exile Memory and Identity at the Borders of the Balkans Princeton University Press p 103 ISBN 0691086974 Anna C Bramwell University of Oxford UK 1988 Refugees in the Age of Total War pp 139 143 ISBN 9780044451945 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Matjaz Klemencic The Effects of the Dissolution of Yugoslavia on Minority Rights the Italian Minority in Post Yugoslav Slovenia and Croatia See Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 24 2011 Retrieved April 23 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Drzavni Zavod za Statistiku in Croatian Retrieved June 10 2017 Popis 2002 Retrieved June 10 2017 a b Judt Tony 2005 Postwar A History of Europe Since 1945 Penguin Press Pinxten Rik Dikomitis Lisa May 1 2009 When God Comes to Town Religious Traditions in Urban Contexts Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 84545 920 8 Retrieved December 31 2021 Cornell Svante E September 1998 Religion as a factor in Caucasian conflicts Civil Wars 1 3 46 64 doi 10 1080 13698249808402381 ISSN 1369 8249 Snyder Timothy July 11 2004 The Reconstruction of Nations Poland Ukraine Lithuania Belarus 1569 1999 Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10586 5 Retrieved December 31 2021 References EditBell Fialkoff Andrew 1993 A Brief History of Ethnic Cleansing Foreign Affairs 72 3 110 121 doi 10 2307 20045626 JSTOR 20045626 Archived from the original on February 3 2004 Petrovic Drazen 1998 Ethnic Cleansing An Attempt at Methodology PDF European Journal of International Law 5 4 817 Thum Gregor 2010 Review Ethnic Cleansing in Eastern Europe after 1945 Contemporary European History 19 1 75 81 doi 10 1017 S0960777309990257 S2CID 145605508 Vladimir Petrovic 2007 Etnicizacija ciscenja u reci i nedelu Ethnicisation of Cleansing Hereticus 1 2007 11 36Further reading EditAnderson Gary Clayton 2014 Ethnic Cleansing and the Indian The Crime That Should Haunt America First ed University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0806144214 LCCN 2013024354 OCLC 851285610 OL 31150659M Anderson Gary Clayton 2005 The Conquest of Texas Ethnic Cleansing in the Promised Land 1820 1875 Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 9780806136981 de Zayas Alfred M Nemesis at Potsdam Routledge London 1977 de Zayas Alfred M A Terrible Revenge Palgrave Macmillan New York 1994 ISBN 1 4039 7308 3 de Zayas Alfred 1 February 2007 Die deutschen Vertriebenen Keine Tater sondern Opfer Hintergrunde Tatsachen Folgen The German expellees not perpetrators but victims background facts consequences in German ARES Verlag ISBN 978 3902475152 LCCN 2006502139 OCLC 71328804 OL 16302134M de Zayas Alfred M Heimatrecht ist Menschenrecht Universitas Munchen 2001 ISBN 3 8004 1416 3 de Zayas Alfred 10 December 1995 1995 09 01 The right to one s homeland ethnic cleansing and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia Criminal Law Forum 6 2 257 314 doi 10 1007 BF01097769 ISSN 1046 8374 LCCN 2007233703 OCLC 223314674 S2CID 144513680 de Zayas Alfred M Forced Population Transfer in Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law Oxford online 2010 Carmichael Cathie 2002 Ethnic cleansing in the Balkans nationalism and the destruction of tradition Illustrated ed Routledge ISBN 0 415 27416 8 Douglas R M Orderly and Humane The Expulsion of the Germans after the Second World War Yale University Press 2012 ISBN 978 0300166606 Kamusella Tomasz 2018 Ethnic Cleansing During the Cold War The Forgotten 1989 Expulsion of Turks from Communist Bulgaria Ser Routledge Studies in Modern European History London Routledge 328pp ISBN 9781138480520 Prauser Steffen and Rees Arfon The Expulsion of the German Communities from Eastern Europe at the End of the Second Century Florence Italy European University Institute 2004 Sundhaussen Holm 2010 Forced Ethnic Migration European History Online Strbac Savo 2015 Gone with the Storm A Chronicle of Ethnic Cleansing of Serbs from Croatia Knin Banja Luka Beograd Grafid DIC Veritas ISBN 9789995589806 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to ethnic cleansing Look up ethnic cleansing in Wiktionary the free dictionary Genocide of The Ethnic Germans in Yugoslavia 1944 1948 Photojournalist s Account Images of ethnic cleansing in Sudan Timothy V Waters On the Legal Construction of Ethnic Cleansing Paper 951 2006 University of Mississippi School of Law PDF Dump the ethnic cleansing jargon group implores May 31 2007 World Science Repa Jan March 29 1999 Ethnic cleansing Revival of an old tradition BBC News Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ethnic cleansing amp oldid 1149430927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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