Rivers of Blood: A Comparative Study of Government Massacres

Front Cover
Bloomsbury Academic, Jul 17, 1995 - Education - 240 pages
Rivers of Blood offers a glimpse into the brutal world of state terrorism. In this innovative study, the author explores the strategies, targets, and motives of terror by reviewing the conditions surrounding government massacres. By introducing an innovative typology of massacres and a classification of terror strategies, the author develops a structural approach to the study of state terror, thus challenging the viewpoint that state terrorism is a situational or reactionary phenomenon. Case studies of government massacres such as those occuring in China (Tiananmen), Iraq (Halabja), and El Salvador (San Salvador), are included. Each case study includes a discussion on the historical, political, and social climate preceding the massacre. Rivers of Blood is a welcome addition to the literature on state terrorism.

About the author (1995)

BRENDA K. UEKERT holds a Ph.D. in Sociology from Syracuse University. She completed her undergraduate studies at the University of Wisconsin at Eau Claire, and spent several years as a senior research analyst at the University of California. Uekert is currently an adjunct instructor at the University of Wisconsin, Green Bay.

Bibliographic information