Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, United Nations General Assembly, adopted December 9, 1948

This convention established genocide as an international crime and created a legal framework requiring states to prevent, punish, and prosecute acts intended to destroy national, ethnic, racial, or religious groups. It became one of the foundational post-World War II human rights and international criminal law treaties.

1. What is genocide?

2. What actions become crimes?

3. Who can be punished?

4. How is genocide prevented and prosecuted?

5. Where are the limits and tensions?