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Genocide as a Management Strategy

The Administrative Logic of Mass Elimination

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Genocide as a Management Strategy

De: Jessica Jones
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
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Genocide as a Management Strategy
The Administrative Logic of Mass Elimination

Genocide is commonly explained as the result of hatred, extremism, or moral collapse. While these factors may be present, they do not explain how mass elimination is repeatedly organized, sustained, and carried out by modern states. History shows that genocide more often emerges not from chaos, but from administration.

Genocide as a Management Strategy examines how systems of governance, bureaucracy, and institutional logic transform the destruction of human populations into a solvable problem. Rather than focusing on graphic violence or individual perpetrators, this book traces the mechanisms that allow mass elimination to proceed quietly, efficiently, and with widespread participation from ordinary professionals.

Through a structural lens, the book explores how language is used to conceal intent, how legal frameworks authorize removal rather than restrain it, and how budgeting, recordkeeping, and division of labor disperse responsibility. Populations are reduced to variables, people become statistics, and moral judgment is replaced by procedural compliance. In such systems, no single actor feels accountable, yet the outcome is catastrophic.

This work shows how genocide is preceded by paperwork, classification, and euphemism; how emergencies are invoked to suspend ethical resistance; and how institutions reward silence while punishing dissent. Doctors, engineers, administrators, and contractors do not appear as villains, but as participants operating within systems that prioritize efficiency over humanity. Distance—both physical and bureaucratic—ensures that responsibility is felt nowhere in full.

The book also examines what happens after mass elimination is complete. Records are curated, failures are studied only to improve future efficiency, and accountability is delayed until it becomes symbolic. Memory itself is managed, not to preserve truth, but to protect institutions and narratives of legitimacy.

Written for readers seeking structural understanding rather than emotional catharsis, Genocide as a Management Strategy does not argue that such events are historical anomalies or the products of uniquely evil individuals. Instead, it demonstrates how modern systems—when left unexamined—can make mass elimination administratively rational, legally defensible, and socially invisible.

This book is not a catalog of atrocities, nor a work of ideological persuasion. It is an examination of how competence, professionalism, and procedural order can become dangerous when detached from moral accountability. The question it raises is not how genocide happens in extreme circumstances, but how easily ordinary systems can be repurposed to achieve extraordinary harm.

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