Between Apathy and Responsibility: Cinematic Representations of UN Peacekeeper’s Moral Dilemma in Hotel Rwanda and No Man's Land
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Abstract
This dissertation examines the moral dilemma faced by individuals and UN peacekeepers
through an analysis of two films: Hotel Rwanda and No Man’s Land. Although the
institutional failures of the UN--caused by limited mandates, geopolitical interests and
bureaucratic failures--during the Rwandan and Bosnian wars have been widely examined
in scholarly literature, cinematic depiction of individuals caught between institutional
orders and moral convictions in these two conflicts remains relatively under explored. The
analysis is carried out to do just that by using multidisciplinary theoretical lens such as
Darley & Latane’s Bystander Apathy Theory, which helps explain the passivity and
inaction of individuals and institutions (like the UN) in the face of violence. Similarly,
the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) Doctrine, a global political commitment adopted by
the United Nations in 2005 to prevent genocide, offers the critical tools for examining the
bureaucratic complicity that gives the impression of apathy and failure in protecting
vulnerable populations. The findings of this research reveal key similarities as well as
differences in how the two films portray UN peacekeepers as both victims of and
complicit in systemic failure and why the much vaunted UN neutrality, when devoid of
moral courage, only contributes to the continuation of atrocity. Ultimately, by analyzing
cinematic portrayals of peacekeepers caught in moral dilemmas, this study highlights the
need for greater accountability and ethical responsibility within global institutions and
calls for a renewed commitment to the humanitarian principle of protecting vulnerable
populations.
Keywords: bystander apathy, genocide, humanitarian interventions, peacekeeping, UN
