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Ethnocide is the extermination or destruction of ethnic identities.[1][2][3] Bartolomé Clavero differentiates ethnocide from genocide by stating that "Genocide kills people while ethnocide kills social cultures through the killing of individual souls".[4] According to Martin Shaw, ethnocide is a core part of physically violent genocide.[1] Some substitute cultural genocide for ethnocide,[5] and other argue the distinction between ethnicity and culture.[3] Cultural genocide and ethnocide have been used in different contexts.[6] While the term "ethnocide" and "ethnic cleansing" are similar, the intentions of their use vary. The term "ethnic cleansing" has been criticized as a euphemism for genocide denial, while "ethnocide" tries to facilitate the opposite.[7][8]
So the idea that ethnocide or 'cultural genocide' is distinct from physically violent genocide is misleading, since cultural genocide can only be the cultural dimension of genocide, something which is integral to every genocidal attack. ... It is better to refer to cultural suppression as the pre-genocidal denial of culture, because the cultural dimension of genocide or cultural suppression is part of a broader genocidal process, and it is different from unintentional group destruction or destruction which occurs when groups are destroyed by diseases and famines which were originally unintended.
AutoC2-1
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).The term 'ethnocide' has in the past been used as a replacement for cultural genocide (Palmer 1992; Smith 1991:30-3), with the obvious risk of confusing ethnicity and culture.
Clavero2008
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).BloxhamMoses2010
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).