Abstract

The focus of the 1948 Genocide Convention on the destruction of groups, in part, encourages consideration of extermination through mass killing and elimination through forced migration and displacement.Yet genocide scholars and the public have given much more attention to extermination than elimination. We seek to remedy this imbalance by giving further attention to the intentional Sudanese state-led attacks on food and water that massively dislodged Black Africans with racially targeted assaults on their homes and villages in Darfur from February 2003 to August 2004. This forced displacement is an important aspect of continuing genocide in Darfur. Much of the response to our paper is concerned with the definition of genocide and with the wisdom of applying this definition of Genocide in Darfur.

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