Eliott Behar

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Eliott Behar

Goodreads Author


Born
in Canada
Website

Twitter

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Member Since
July 2014


From an early age I've been drawn to fundamental questions about human psychology, justice, and human rights. I spent ten years as a criminal prosecutor, an experience that has informed my writing and led me to ask - and try to answer - some difficult questions about our notions of justice and our understanding of violence, hate, and discrimination.

In my writing I try to explore difficult issues from new and sometimes unconventional perspectives. I speak regularly on a range of topics and issues, and I always welcome new thoughts, ideas or feedback.

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Average rating: 4.27 · 171 ratings · 25 reviews · 1 distinct workSimilar authors
Tell It to the World: Inter...

4.27 avg rating — 171 ratings — published 2014 — 3 editions
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The Explorer's Gene by Alex  Hutchinson
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The Witnesses by Eric Stover
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We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed with Ou... by Philip Gourevitch
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Quotes by Eliott Behar  (?)
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“the stories we tell about injustice can also be used to enable and perpetuate large-scale violence in the first place.”
Eliott Behar, Tell It to the World: International Justice and the Secret Campaign to Hide Mass Murder in Kosovo

“While we may have a tendency to cast the perpetrators of such crimes as monsters, we should never lose sight of the lesson that virtually every genocide, crime against humanity, or large-scale act of violence teaches when one looks closely enough: that it is surprisingly easy to succumb to the mindsets, justifications, and acts that lead to such violence and cruelty. The form that such justifications take have a way, it seems, of always feeling new.”
Eliott Behar, Tell It to the World: International Justice and the Secret Campaign to Hide Mass Murder in Kosovo

“Outside of the courtroom, in the dialogues we engage in and the discussions we have, we should be asking ourselves continually whether the stories we tell divide or unite. If we are casting ourselves collectively as victims, to what end are we doing so? Is there a way in which this is seemingly entitling us to collectively diminish others or to sanction acts that we wouldn’t otherwise feel entitled to endorse?”
Eliott Behar, Tell It to the World: International Justice and the Secret Campaign to Hide Mass Murder in Kosovo

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Around the World ...: Kosovo 12 530 Mar 18, 2025 09:27AM  
“collective violence is almost always motivated by the perpetrators and their base of supporters responding to what they see as injustice, and pursuing a form of justice for themselves. It is perpetuated, in much the same way, by the perception that what they are doing, while it might otherwise have been immoral, is justified. Such violence is not typically caused by an absence of, or lack of attention to, justice and morality. It is, instead, caused by the direct and overriding pursuit of a misdirected view of morality and justice, constructed as justification in the minds of the perpetrators.”
Eliott Behar, Tell It to the World: International Justice and the Secret Campaign to Hide Mass Murder in Kosovo

“Outside of the courtroom, in the dialogues we engage in and the discussions we have, we should be asking ourselves continually whether the stories we tell divide or unite. If we are casting ourselves collectively as victims, to what end are we doing so? Is there a way in which this is seemingly entitling us to collectively diminish others or to sanction acts that we wouldn’t otherwise feel entitled to endorse?”
Eliott Behar, Tell It to the World: International Justice and the Secret Campaign to Hide Mass Murder in Kosovo

“the stories we tell about injustice can also be used to enable and perpetuate large-scale violence in the first place.”
Eliott Behar, Tell It to the World: International Justice and the Secret Campaign to Hide Mass Murder in Kosovo

“While we may have a tendency to cast the perpetrators of such crimes as monsters, we should never lose sight of the lesson that virtually every genocide, crime against humanity, or large-scale act of violence teaches when one looks closely enough: that it is surprisingly easy to succumb to the mindsets, justifications, and acts that lead to such violence and cruelty. The form that such justifications take have a way, it seems, of always feeling new.”
Eliott Behar, Tell It to the World: International Justice and the Secret Campaign to Hide Mass Murder in Kosovo

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