Fuji Reading
Weiss & Ungor
Weiss & Ungor pt. 2
100

This mass atrocity was covered in the reading

The Rwandan Genocide

100

"cooperation between elements of the population of a defeated state and the representatives of the victorious power.” describes this action.

Collaboration

100

Collaborators break the binary system composed of these two groups.

Perpetrator & Victim

200

Actions taken to keep another person from being killed are coined this

Acts of Rescue

200

This ethnic group was enticed by the Ottoman Empire to commit atrocities against Armenians.

The Kurdish population.

200

This is emphasized over conscious decision making to described the unspoken consensus that led the bulk of the minority population tacitly to support or at least to accept mass murder.

Collective reasoning.

300

This social class has the greatest ability to help others

The elites

300

This term is used to describe the dominant group in charge of a state.

Hegemonic power

300

This ethnic group in Rwanda breaks the Hutu-Tutsi dichotomy as they were also killers and killed.

The Twa

400

These people can commit acts of rescue.

Anyone.

400

A defendant carged with genocide may plead this, meaning they made conscious choice to pursue the lesser of two evils.

Necessity

400

This is the main reason for a minority group to assist the hegemonic power in destroying another such group.

Improving one's own status

500

According to the article, rescuing is highly dependent on this

The immediate context.

500

In legal terms, collaboration in genocide falls under this category.

Accessory

500

This doctrine links the defendants’ criminal responsibility for their own acts to that of the group to which they belong.

Joint Criminal Enterprise