1. Lawrence J. LeBlanc, The United States and the Genocide Convention (Durham, NC: Duke UP, 1991), 1
2. David Auerswald and Forrest Maltzman, "Policymaking Through Advice and Consent: Treaty Consideration by the United States Senate," The Journal of Politics 65,4 (2003): 1099. For a contemporary explanation of the Genocide Convention's terms, see "Genocide: A Commentary on the Convention," Yale Law Journal 58,7 (1949): 1142-60.
3. Louis Henkin, “U.S. Ratification of Human Rights Conventions: The Ghost of Senator Bricker,” The American Journal of International Law 89,2 (1995): 347; Samantha Power, “A Problem from Hell”: America and the Age of Genocide (New York: Basic Books, 2013), 64–65; “What's News–World-Wide,” The Wall Street Journal, 10 December 1948; “Reagan Signs Bill Making U.S. Party to Genocide Treaty,” The Washington Post, 5 November 1988. It is necessary to note that Samantha Power served as US ambassador to the United Nations during the administration of US President Barack H. Obama, and Ambassador Power currently serves as Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) for US President Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
4. Francis A. Boyle, “The Hypocrisy and Racism Behind the Formulation of U.S. Human Rights Foreign Policy: In Honor of Clyde Ferguson,” Social Justice 16,1 (1989): 71–93; Henkin, “U.S. Ratification of Human Rights Conventions,” 341–50; LeBlanc, United States and the Genocide Convention, 40–42, 237; Samantha Power, “The United States and Genocide Prevention: No Justice Without Risk,” The Brown Journal of World Affairs 6,1 (1999): 23.
5. Boyle, “Hypocrisy and Racism,” 83; Power, “United States and Genocide Prevention,” 23.