The Pol Pot regime race, power, and genocide in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge, 1975-79 Ben Kiernan.
Material type: TextPublication details: New Haven London Yale University Press 2002.Edition: Second editionDescription: xxiii, 477 pages, [20] pages of plates illustrations, maps 20 cmISBN:- 0300096496
- 959.60422 KIE
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Center for Khmer Studies | 959.60422 KIE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 9921 |
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Includes bibliographical references (p. 467-469) and index.
The making of the 1975 Khmer Rouge victory Cleansing the cities: the quest for total power Cleansing the countryside: race, power, and the party, 1973-75 Cleansing the frontiers: neighbors, friends, and enemies, 1975-76 An indentured agrarian state, 1975-77t regime. The base areas The southwest and the east Peasants and deportees in the northwest Ethnic cleansing: The CPK and Cambodia's minorities, 1975-77 Power politics, 1976-77 Foreign relations, 1977-78: Warfare, weapons, and wildlife "Thunder without rain": race and power in Cambodia, 1978 The end of the Pol Pot regime
The Khmer Rouge revolution turned Cambodia into grisly killing fields, as the Pol Pot regime murdered or starved to death a million and a half of Cambodia's eight million inhabitants. This book - the first comprehensive study of the Pol Pot regime - describes the violent origins, social context, and course of the revolution, providing a new answer to the question of why a group of Cambodian intellectuals imposed genocide on their own country.
English
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