Tag: Brutality

The Rise of Organised Brutality A Historical Sociology of Violence


Free Download Siniša Malešević, "The Rise of Organised Brutality: A Historical Sociology of Violence"
English | 2017 | ISBN: 110709562X | PDF | pages: 350 | 1.9 mb
Challenging the prevailing belief that organised violence is experiencing historically continuous decline, this book provides an in-depth sociological analysis that shows organised violence is, in fact, on the rise. Malešević demonstrates that violence is determined by organisational capacity, ideological penetration and micro-solidarity, rather than biological tendencies, meaning that despite pre-modern societies being exposed to spectacles of cruelty and torture, such societies had no organisational means to systematically slaughter millions of individuals. Malešević suggests that violence should not be analysed as just an event or process, but also via changing perceptions of those events and processes, and by linking this to broader social transformations on the inter-polity and inter-group levels he makes his key argument that organised violence has proliferated. Focusing on wars, revolutions, genocides and terrorism, this book shows how modern social organisations utilise ideology and micro-solidarity to mobilise public support for mass scale violence.

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Brutality in an Age of Human Rights Activism and Counterinsurgency at the End of the British Empire


Free Download Brutality in an Age of Human Rights: Activism and Counterinsurgency at the End of the British Empire by Brian Drohan
English | January 15, 2018 | ISBN: 1501714651 | 256 pages | EPUB | 0.73 Mb
In Brutality in an Age of Human Rights, Brian Drohan demonstrates that British officials’ choices concerning counterinsurgency methods have long been deeply influenced or even redirected by the work of human rights activists. To reveal how that influence was manifested by military policies and practices, Drohan examines three British counterinsurgency campaigns―Cyprus (1955-1959), Aden (1963-1967), and the peak of the "Troubles" in Northern Ireland (1969-1976). This book is enriched by Drohan’s use of a newly available collection of 1.2 million colonial-era files, International Committee of the Red Cross files, the extensive Troubles collection at Linen Hall Library in Belfast, and many other sources.

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