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6 Wash. U. Global Stud. L. Rev. 583 (2007)
Can We Compare Evils - The Enduring Debate of Genocide and Crimes against Humanity

handle is hein.journals/wasglo6 and id is 591 raw text is: CAN WE COMPARE EVILS?
THE ENDURING DEBATE ON GENOCIDE AND
CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY
STEVEN R. RATNER*
A look back at the twentieth century reveals that the most critical steps
in the criminalization of mass human rights constituted the academic work
of Raphel Lemkin and his conceptualization of genocide; the International
Military Tribunal Charter's criminalization of crimes against humanity
and the trials that followed; and the conclusion and broad ratification of
the Genocide Convention. The Convention was the first treaty since those
of slavery and the white slave traffic to criminalize peacetime actions by
a government against its citizens. Since that time, customary international
law has recognized the de-coupling of crimes against humanity from
wartime.
The result of this process has been two separate international criminal
proscriptions-one through custom, one through treaty-covering slightly
different sets of atrocities against civilians. The three key differences
between genocide under the Genocide Convention and crimes against
humanity (under multiple definitions, including that of the Statute creating
the International Criminal Court (ICC Statute)) are the inclusion in the
former only of three elements: (a) the intent to destroy a group in whole or
in part; (b) a limited set of groups against whose members the relevant acts
are criminal, i.e., racial, religious, national, or ethnic; and (c) a limited list
of grave underlying acts focusing on physical extermination.'
Why should we care if international law recognizes two different
crimes? Domestic law frequently criminalizes different acts as different
crimes-if the difference between libel and battery makes perfect sense to
us, or that between homicide and manslaughter, why not just see this as
part of same issue?
The short answer is that reality will not let us-that governments,
NGOs, and the public see genocide and crimes against humanity not
simply as distinct crimes, but that the former is worse than the latter-and,
moreover, that a determination that a state or group has committed the
* Professor of Law, University of Michigan.
1. Compare Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crimes of Genocide, Dec. 9,
1948, art. 2, 78 U.N.T.S. 277, with Statute of the International Criminal Court, art. 7, U.N. Doc.
A/CONF.183/9.

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