Introduction
World War II's Holocaust brought a new language into the world, including the word genocide. In response to the horrors of that event and other crimes committed in Europe and Asia, the international community conducted trials to prosecute and punish crimes against peace, crimes against humanity, and war crimes. These terms garnered better understanding as a result, although war crimes trials had precedents from earlier conflicts. After the Nuremberg and Tokyo trials, the first half of the twentieth century ended with states adopting an international treaty, the Convention for the Prosecution and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, which outlawed efforts to destroy a people. Subsequent agreements have further identified and defined war crimes and crimes against humanity. -- Encyclopedia of Genocide
Recommended Resources
All Resources by Category
- Art and Literature
- Articles
- Encyclopedia of Genocide: Genocide Definition
- Law Encyclopedia: Genocide
- Public Health Encyclopedia: Genocide
- United States Foreign Policies Toward Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity
- Utopian Ideologies as Motives for Genocide
- Essays
- Abortion Is a Form of Genocide
- Abortion Is Not a Form of Genocide
- Describing the Horrors of Virtual Genocide and Destruction of a Culture
- War-Crimes Tribunals Must Punish Those Responsible for Genocide in Rwanda
- Films
- History
- Major Events
- Armenians Suffer Genocide During World War I
- Burundi Commits Genocide of Hutu Majority
- China Initiates a Genocide Policy Toward Tibetians
- United Nations Adopts Convention on Genocide
- United Nations Tribunal Convicts Rwandan Leader of Genocide
- United Nations Tribunal Convicts Rwandans of Genocide
- Overview
- Primary Sources
