"Rooted in a personal hunger for justice and reconciliation, After Genocide makes an indispensible contribution to current debates about international justice, and international interventions more generally, by challenging the ideology that the international is by definition a better force for good than the national or local. Smith convincingly calls to account an international movement that holds others criminally responsible, but has thus far managed to shield itself behind judicial robes from political accountability for its own operations." -- Making Sense of Darfur blog, August 18, 2009