Melber, Henning2018-01-112018-01-112012-08Melber, H. 2012, '‘There will always be enough people to fight for a decent future’', Development Dialogue, pp. 8-13.0345-2328http://hdl.handle.net/2263/63484The whole package, coming in at just over 300 pages, has the feel more of a scholarly book than it does a single journal issue, and it practically demands employment as such – for this volume has both the philosophical heft and general accessibility to serve as a primer to the field of genocide studies. While its modern historical case studies are limited to a meager handful of sub-Saharan nations (with two of them focusing upon Zimbabwe), they are all excellent works that provide a useful template for further inquiry. Moreover, the Dag Hammarskjöld Centre generously makes this issue along with others in the Development Dialogue series, available for free download at its website. If this volume is indicative of the broader work of the Dag Hammarskjöld Centre, then people of goodwill across the world have a valuable ally in their struggle against inhumanity and violence.en© Dag Hammarskjöld FoundationGenocide studiesSub-Saharan nationsDag Hammarskjöld CentreInhumanity‘There will always be enough people to fight for a decent future’Article