"If many people were shocked by Trump's 2016 election, many more were stunned when, months later, white power extremists took to the streets of Charlottesville chanting "Blood and Soil" and "Jews will not replace us!" Like Trump, the Charlottesville marchers were dismissed as aberrations -- the momentary appearance of "racists" and "haters" who didn't represent the real U.S. Rather than being exceptional, It Can Happen Here argues these events are symptoms of the country's long history of systemic white supremacy, genocide, and atrocity crimes. And there is a high likelihood that such violence will occur here again. This reality, "It Can Happen Here" demonstrates, is a key post-mortem lesson we have learned from the 2016-2020 Trump presidency. "It Can Happen Here" breaks new ground by raising the alarm about the on-going threat of genocide and mass violence in the U.S. as well as considering path forward for repair. Written from a public anthropology perspective, it is also the field's first book to explore contemporary white power extremism in the U.S"--
Alexander Hinton Bücher
Alexander Hinton ist Professor für Anthropologie und globale Angelegenheiten sowie Direktor des Zentrums für das Studium von Völkermord und Menschenrechten an der Rutgers University, Newark. Seine Arbeit konzentriert sich auf das anthropologische Verständnis von Gewalt, Völkermord und anderen Formen der Massenunterdrückung.


"This book asks whether scholars who serve as expert witnesses can effectively contribute to tribunals for international atrocity crimes, where the focus is on legal guilt as opposed to academic explanation"--