
Witnessing Sociocide
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Sociocide means the murdering of the social encompassing matters pertaining to human solidarity: family, social institutions, ethnic, and national identity. This study develops and applies the concept to describe the social and human consequences of the war in Gaza, making comparisons to Chechnya, Iraq, Bosnia, and Ukraine. The conflict in Gaza creates an anomic state of nature where force and fraud are the cardinal virtues. This war demolishes houses as well as the prestige of the home. It kills civilians, that is, children, mothers, and entire families. It destroys communities, their invaluable history and collective memory. It eradicates social systems. The war murders a society. The goal of the comparative study is to frame objectively the moral anomie surrounding the violence of war in Gaza and its impact on world order. It also uses the term sociocide to consider the political war in the United States and the social entrapment of the spirit of capitalism as formulated by Max Weber.
The study asks, is there something within society that is resistant to its own demise? Whenever human beings gather, is there an imperishable part of their solidarity? This study takes up these questions concertedly, drawing upon the truisms of important figures in the field of social thought.
This book will therefore be of interest to students and scholars of sociology, conflict studies, genocide studies, and any general reader interested in understanding the extent and impact of contemporary conflicts.
Reviews / Votes
This book stages a highly important intervention in one of the most pressing social conversations of our time. The greatest strength of this book lies in the author's courage to write about suffering from a humanistic perspective in a societal climate where public opinion is deeply divided into "FOR" and "AGAINST." The author does so without sparing the responsible policies that effectively preserve dominant narratives keeping the conflict alive. Extending his theory of sociocide in a salient way, Keith Doubt continues to address the question of morality in politics-a subject largely neglected in many social theories.Nermina Mujagic, Professor of Political Science, University of Sarajevo
Doubt's notion of sociocide is an important contribution. He makes clear that we are now close to the sociocidal abyss, at risk of unraveling everything social that sustains us. Read, weep, and act.
Charles Derber, Professor of Sociology, Boston College, and author of Bonfire: American Sociocide, Broken Relations, and the Quest for Democracy (Routledge, 2025) and Fighting Oligarchy: How Positive Populism Can Reclaim America (Routledge, 2026)
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