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Rhiannon Neilsen
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Year
‘Toxification’as a more precise early warning sign for genocide than dehumanization? An emerging research agenda
RS Neilsen
Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal 9 (1), 9, 2015
432015
“They will rot the society, rot the party, and rot the army”*: Toxification as an ideology and motivation for perpetrating violence in the Khmer Rouge genocide?
T Williams, R Neilsen
Terrorism and Political Violence 31 (3), 494-515, 2019
352019
'Dents in the Soul'?
R Neilsen
Moral Injury: Unseen Wounds in an Age of Barbarism, 2015
92015
Coding protection:‘cyber humanitarian interventions’ for preventing mass atrocities
R Neilsen
International Affairs 99 (1), 299-319, 2023
52023
Limited Force and the Return of Reprisals in the Law of Armed Conflict
EA Heinze, R Neilsen
Ethics & International Affairs 34 (2), 175-188, 2020
52020
Cyber Humanitarian Interventions: The viability and ethics of using cyber-operations to disrupt perpetrators’ means and motivations for atrocities in the digital age
R Neilsen
UNSW Sydney, 2021
22021
Cyber Intelligence and Influence: In Defense of “Cyber Manipulation Operations” to Parry Atrocities
R Neilsen
Ethics & International Affairs 37 (2), 161-176, 2023
12023
Book Review: The Structural Prevention of Mass Atrocities: Understanding Risk and Resilience
RS Neilsen
Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal 9 (3), 15, 2016
12016
Reluctant to Protect? The Role of Moral Reputation in Joining Military Coalitions
R Neilsen
Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding 17 (4), 477-496, 2023
2023
“Honey, I’m Hacked”: Ethical Questions Raised by Ukrainian Cyber Deception of Russian Military Wives
R Neilsen
NYU: New York University, 2023
2023
An overview of political approaches to human rights
R Neilsen, T Campbell
Political and Legal Approaches to Human Rights, 229-239, 2018
2018
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Articles 1–11