"Lost and Found: Yale researchers uncover documents of the Cambodian genocide long thought to have been lost," by My Khanh Ngo.
Yale Globalist 8:4 (summer 2008), p. 9.
Racial Discrimination in the Cambodian Genocide, by Liai Duong (No. 34, 2006)
Preface to the Third Edition of The Pol Pot Regime: Race, Power and Genocide in Cambodia
under the Khmer Rouge, 1975-79 (Yale University Press, 2008), pp. ix-xxiii
The Pol Pot Regime (2002 edition)
How Pol Pot Came to Power (2004 edition)
"Bringing the Khmer Rouge to Justice"
(Human Rights Review, 1, 3, April-June 2000, pp. 92-108)
"...Khmer Rouge's chief ideologue in the 1970s, the defendant, 85, spoke of threats from Vietnamese agents as a justification for the purges that led to the torture and killings that defined the Khmer Rouge regime."
As the title implies, this is not an easy book to read. But it is very well written and a compelling story of life and survival under the Khmer Rouge. I have a copy if anyone in the group would like to borrow it.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This document was originally published on the website of the Documentation Center of Cambodia. It is reposted here with the kind permission of the author. A related article, discussing the implications of the mapping project and other estimates of the death toll, may be found at http://www.mekong.net/cambodia/deaths.htm.