Outside of a Small Circle of Friends: States, Genocide, Mass Killing and The Role of Bystanders

The paper begins with a brief discussion of the conditions under which genocide and other instances of mass killing occur and discusses recent levels of reporting of such instances. The core of the paper is an examination of the circumstances and structural conditions which have allowed these crimes against humanity to go relatively undernoticed and unchallenged. Three interrelated questions concerning the assumptions which are built into the current state system and the state as an institution guide the analysis of how states have arrived at a position in which mass killing by states and their agents is somehow 'accepted' and whereby there is little expectation that other states in the system will intervene on behalf of those in danger. To explore the lack of response further, the literature of 'bystander apathy' is introduced and the classic formulation of Latane & Darley 1969 is employed to structure an exammation of bystander non-involvement in the international system of states. Eleven confounding factors present in the international system are suggested. The paper concludes with some suggestions for moving beyond non-involvement to move beyond the 'small circle of friends' who need to become involved if future mass killings are to be prevented.

[1]  M. Ayoob Security in the Third World: the worm about to turn? , 1983 .

[2]  Brian W. May The Indonesian tragedy , 1980, The Journal of Asian Studies.

[3]  Government Violence and Repression: An Agenda for Research , 1986 .

[4]  Marcia P. Miceli,et al.  Potential Predictors of Whistle-Blowing: A Prosocial Behavior Perspective , 1985 .

[5]  J. Donnelly,et al.  Law, Morality, and the Relations of States , 1983 .

[6]  Herbert G. Kelman Violence without Moral Restraint: Reflections on the Dehumanization of Victims and Victimizers , 1973 .

[7]  S. Schwartz,et al.  Responsibility and helping in an emergency: effects of blame, ability and denial of responsibility. , 1976, Sociometry.

[8]  Shelley E. Taylor,et al.  Salience, Attention, and Attribution: Top of the Head Phenomena , 1978 .

[9]  K. Chaudhuri Genocide in Bangladesh , 1979 .

[10]  R. L. Shotland,et al.  The Role of Bystanders in Crime Control , 1984 .

[11]  J. Power Amnesty International, the human rights story , 1981 .

[12]  E. Cassirer,et al.  The Myth of the State , 1947 .

[13]  Andrew K. Semmel The elite press, the global system, and foreign news attention , 1977 .

[14]  Terry Nardin,et al.  Nonintervention and Human Rights , 1986, The Journal of Politics.

[15]  N. Davis The Last Two Years of Salvador Allende , 1985 .

[16]  Raul Hilberg,et al.  The Destruction of the European Jews , 2017 .

[17]  T. Nagel Public and Private Morality: RUTHLESSNESS IN PUBLIC LIFE , 1978 .

[18]  Jonathan L. Fried Guatemala in Rebellion: Unfinished History , 1983 .

[19]  Leo Kuper The Prevention of Genocide , 1986 .

[20]  G. Kren,et al.  The Holocaust and the Crisis of Human Behavior. , 1980 .

[21]  W. Laqueur The Terrible Secret , 1980 .

[22]  I. Horowitz Genocide: State Power and Mass Murder , 1976 .

[23]  Nigel S. Rodley,et al.  After Bangladesh: The Law of Humanitarian Intervention by Military Force , 1973, American Journal of International Law.

[24]  Dimensions of helping behavior : M. Smithson, P.R. Amato, and P. Pearce Oxford: Pergamon, 1983, 164 pages, $22.50 , 1983 .

[25]  J. Dovidio,et al.  Chapter 12 – Responsive Bystanders: The Process of Intervention1 , 1982 .

[26]  E. Clements,et al.  Africa contemporary record : annual survey and documents , 1969 .

[27]  Charles R. Beitz,et al.  Political Theory and International Relations. , 1981 .

[28]  Hannah Arendt,et al.  The Origins of Totalitarianism , 1959 .

[29]  J. G. Stoessinger Henry Kissinger: The anguish of power , 1976 .

[30]  Michael Stohl States, Terrorism and State Terrorism: The Role of the Superpowers , 1988 .

[31]  Lucy S. Dawidowicz The War Against the Jews , 1975 .

[32]  R. M. Hare,et al.  War and Moral Responsibility , 1974 .