This is an important contribution, offering new insights to the crucial and complicated dilemmas regarding rescue in cases of genocides. Governments ability to help humanity, even powerful states like the U.S., has its limits. The author rejects the possibility of military intervention and proposes philanthropy as an effective way to save lives.This is an outstanding work, and will have an effect upon the perceptions by historians and students of American policy.This is a work that engages a highly important issue in the country's past, current situation, and likely challenges in the future in a manner that is both original and balanced. ?The reading public as well as the nation's leaders and their advisors will find here helpful insights into a most difficult problem.Using an array of primary sources, Keith Pomakoy presents case studies of American rescue or relief measures in response to genocide. From Spanish anti-insurgency measures in late nineteenth-century Cuba to cases of genocide and ethnic cleansing in the 1990s, the United States has never devised an easy way to halt genocide. Expanding upon Merle Curtis 1963 American Philanthropy Abroad, Pomakoy shows that private organizations often supplied effective assistance when government could not or would not.Helping Humanity: American Policy and Genocide Rescue offers a scholarly examination of America's complicated reactions to genocide and genocide rescue. It provides a synthesis of humanitarian concerns within the broader narrative of American foreign policy that gives an underappreciated policy consideration the attention it is due. This book will serve as an approachable work both for those interested in genocide and specialists in foreign policy.Helping Humanity: American Policy and Genocide Rescue explores American foreign policy reactions to genocide and state caused humanitarian crises. This book provides an examination of the nature of genocide and America's 19th century philanthropic efforts; it thlc-