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The Dark Side of Democracy: Explaining Ethnic Cleansing

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  • The Dark Side of Democracy: Explaining Ethnic Cleansing

    This Short Review is from Foreign Affairs Magazine. Read it online at:

    http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20041101fabook8 3616/michael-mann/the-dark-side-of-democracy-expla ining-ethnic-cleansing.html

    Political and Legal
    By G. John Ikenberry
    >From Foreign Affairs, November/December 2004
    The Dark Side of Democracy: Explaining Ethnic Cleansing. Michael Mann. New
    York: Cambridge University Press, 2004, 584 pp. $70.00 (paper, $24.99)

    Ethnic cleansing is typically seen as the work of primitive evildoers
    operating outside of modernity. In this important and provocative
    book, the distinguished sociologist Mann argues that murderous ethnic
    cleansing is in fact an ugly facet of our modern democratic age-that
    "it belongs to our own civilization and to us." Mann suggests that
    democratization in particular multiethnic settings can create
    situations in which "rule by the people" is defined in ethnic terms,
    leading a majority group to tyrannize minorities. A "danger zone" is
    reached when rival ethnic groups lay claim to the same territory, and
    do so with some legitimacy and prospect of success. Often an outgrowth
    of an unrelated crisis such as a war, ethnic cleansing breaks out when
    the weaker side fights because of the promise of outside aid-as in the
    Yugoslav, Rwandan, Kashmiri, and Chechen cases-or when the stronger
    side believes it can cleanse a state at considerable profit and little
    risk-as in the Armenian and Jewish genocides. Mann's account is not
    the last word on ethnic cleansing, but it certainly is among the most
    sophisticated yet.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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