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The Life Course of Pol Pot: How his Early Life Influenced the Crimes he Committed
Author(s) -
Myra de Vries,
Maartje Weerdesteijn
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
amsterdam law forum
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1876-8156
DOI - 10.37974/alf.318
Subject(s) - course (navigation) , life course approach , psychology , criminology , political science , developmental psychology , engineering , aerospace engineering
International criminology focuses mostly on the lower level perpetrators even though it finds the leader is crucial for orchestrating the circumstances in which those people kill. While numerous theories from ordinary criminology have been usefully applied to these lower level perpetrators, the applicability of these theories to the leaders has remained underexplored. In order to fill this gap, the life-course theory of Sampson and Laub will be applied to Pol Pot whose brutal communist regime, cost the lives of approximately 1,7 million people. A difficult childhood, the influence of peers while he studied in Paris, and his marriage to a woman who shared his revolutionary mind-set, were all negative turning-points for Pol Pot.

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