Criminal Law

The Rationality of Dictators: Towards a More Effective Implementation of the Responsibility to Protect

By Maartje Weerdesteijn
Intersentia Publishers November 2016

Specifications

ISBN-13
9781780684437
Publisher
Intersentia Publishers
Publication
November 2016
Format
Paperback
Jurisdiction
U.K. ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

A non-democratic system of government is an important risk factor for the perpetration of atrocity crimes, meaning genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes and ethnic cleansing. At the 2005 World Summit the international community accepted the responsibility to protect populations from these crimes when the domestic state is failing to do so. The implementation of the responsibility to protect, however, leaves much to be desired.

This book studies the role dictators play in orchestrating mass atrocities and analyses their decision-making process when the international community tries to stop or mitigate the perpetration of these crimes. Through a comparative case study of Pol Pot and Slobodan Milosevic it argues that the role ideology plays in the decision-making process of the dictator is an important determinant of their responsiveness. In doing so, it challenges the common notion that all dictators are primarily motivated by retaining their position of power and argues that while dictators are frequently characterised as raging mad men, this is not necessarily always the case. It rather argues in favour of a more nuanced approach to rationality, that uses the work of Max Weber to acknowledge that different types of rationality exist, when analysing the decision-making process of dictators.

The book is therefore an indispensable resource for scholars who are interested in the role of dictators in bringing forth and stopping mass atrocities and for anyone who wants more insight into the rationality of dictators.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements and Contents
Chapter 1. Introduction
Part I. The Theory
Chapter 2. The world of the Dictator
Chapter 3. Mass Atrocities and the Role of the Dictator
Chapter 4. Preventing and Stopping Mass Atrocities: the Responisiblity to Protect
Chapter 5. The Interaction between States and Heads of States: the role of Rationality
Chapter 6. Different Kinds of Rationality: The Work of Max Weber
Part II. The Comparative Case Study
Chapter 7. Pol Pot and the Destruction of Cambodia
Chapter 8. Milosevic and the Dissolution of Yugoslavia
Chapter 9. The Rationality of Pol Pot
Chapter 10. The Rationality of Milosevic
Chapter 11. Military Intervention: Lessons Learned from the Wars with NATO and Vietnam
Chapter 12. Lessons Learned for the Implementation of the Responsibility to Protect
Chapter 13. Conclusion: A Piece of the Puzzle
References
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