TORN apart by genocidal violence last year that killed an estimated half million people, Rwanda is seeking to bring the killers to account.
The United Nations presents a core policy and a great challenge to prevent another round of genocidal violence.
Occasionally, however, contact between communities of the comparatively unpredictable chimpanzees will develop into genocidal violence.
But to reduce genocidal violence, we must withhold support for the cynical provocations of militants who bear little resemblance to our founders.
There is a children's memorial and an exhibition on the history of genocidal violence around the world.
Jared Diamond has suggested that genocidal violence may have caused the Neanderthals to go extinct.
Her research focuses on the causes, risks, and prevention of genocidal violence.
A study by a Harvard University researcher estimates that 9.9% of the participation in the genocidal violence was due to the broadcasts.
The third is violence, sometimes genocidal, directed against the market-dominant minority itself.
Such genocidal violence constitutes one of the most pressing challenges the world faces and raises a number of related questions: How does genocide come to take place?