Contact Us
linkedin
twitter
  • ABOUT SSL
    • History
    • Contributors
  • DISCIPLINES
    • Anthropology
    • Economics
    • History
    • Philosophy
    • Political Science
    • Social Psychology
    • Sociology
  • SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
    • Evolving Values for a Capitalist World
    • Frontier Issues in Economic Thought
    • Galbraith Series
    • Global History
  • NEWSLETTER

Guatemala in the 1980s: A Genocide Turned into Ethnocide?

  1. Home
  2. >>
  3. Philosophy
  4. >>
  5. War
  6. >>
  7. Violence and Aggression
  8. >>
  9. Torture and Genocide
  10. >>
  11. Guatemala in the 1980s:...
Guatemala in the 1980s: A Genocide Turned into Ethnocide?
Author(s)Oettler, Anika
AbstractWhile the Guatemalan Truth Commission came to the conclusion that agents of the state had committed acts of genocide in the early 1980s, fundamental questions remain. Should we indeed speak of the massacres committed between 1981 and 1983 in Guatemala as “genocide”, or would “ethnocide” be the more appropriate term? In addressing these questions, this paper focuses on the intentions of the perpetrators. Why did the Guatemalan military chose mass murder as the means to “solve the problem of subversion”? In Guatemala, the discourses of communist threat, racism and Pentecostal millenarism merged into the intent to destroy the Mayan population. This paper demonstrates that the initial policy of physical annihilation (genocidal option) was transformed into a policy of restructuring the sociocultural patterns of the Guatemalan highlands (ethnocidal option).
IssueNo
Pages1-26
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceGerman Institute of Global and Area Studies
VolumeNo
PubDate 2006
ISBN_ISSN

Violence and Aggression

  • Economic and Social Causes
  • Ethical Issues
  • Psychological Causes
  • Torture and Genocide


Boston University | ECI | Contact Us

Copyright Notification: The Social Science Library (SSL) is for distribution in a defined set of countries. The complete list may be found here. Free distribution within these countries is encouraged, but copyright law forbids distribution outside of these countries.