Alternate Timelines

Scenarios about 'genocide'

The systematic and deliberate destruction of a racial, ethnic, religious, or national group through killing, causing serious harm, or imposing conditions meant to bring about its physical destruction. Genocides throughout history, including the Holocaust, Rwandan Genocide, and Armenian Genocide, represent profound human rights violations that have shaped international law and humanitarian principles. In alternate history scenarios, examining potential genocides averted or alternative responses to historical atrocities provides insights into how human societies might have developed differently.

What If The International Criminal Court Never Formed?

Exploring the alternate timeline where the Rome Statute failed to gain sufficient support, leaving the world without its first permanent international criminal tribunal and reshaping global justice and accountability.

What If The Rwandan Genocide Never Happened?

Exploring the alternate timeline where the 1994 Rwandan Genocide was prevented, potentially altering the trajectory of Central Africa's development and international humanitarian intervention norms.

What If The Rwandan Genocide Was Prevented?

Exploring the alternate timeline where international intervention stopped the Rwandan Genocide of 1994, potentially transforming Central African development, refugee crises, and international peacekeeping doctrine.

What If The Wannsee Conference Never Occurred?

Exploring the alternate timeline where the infamous Nazi meeting that formalized the 'Final Solution' never took place, potentially altering the course and implementation of the Holocaust.

What If War Crimes Were Never Prosecuted?

Exploring the alternate timeline where international efforts to prosecute war crimes never materialized, fundamentally altering the evolution of international law, human rights protections, and global accountability.

What If the Rwandan Genocide Was Prevented?

Exploring how African and world history would have unfolded if international intervention had stopped the 1994 Rwandan genocide, transforming regional development and humanitarian response.