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Nazi Crimes and the Law


ISBN13: 9781316617229
Published: July 2016
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback (Hardback in 2009)
Price: £30.99
Hardback edition , ISBN13 9780521899741



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This book examines the use of national and international law to prosecute Nazi crimes, the centerpiece of twentieth-century state-sponsored genocide and mass murder crimes, the paradigmatic instance of state-sponsored criminality and genocide in the twentieth century.

In its various essays, the contributors reconstruct the historical historical setting of the crimes committed under the aegis of the Nazi regime and examine why postwar adjudication took place only within limits, within the national and international judicial forums responsible for prosecuting perpetrators.

The topics discussed include the impact of the Nazi justice system on postwar justice, postwar legal proceedings against those who committed war crimes and genocide, the work of the Nuremberg tribunal and Allied trials, and judicial investigations and prosecutions in East Germany, West Germany, and Austria. They span the postwar period up to contemporary U.S. legal efforts to deport Nazi criminals within its borders and libel trials against Holocaust denials in London and Canadian courts and libel suits brought by Holocaust deniers in British and Canadian courts, and they reveal new perspectives on the present and future implications of these trials.

  • Essays cover many different aspects of the prosecution of Nazi war crimes
  • Discusses the long-term consequences of the Nazi justice system
  • Considers both national and international prosecution of Nazi war criminals

Subjects:
International Criminal Law
Contents:
1. German law and Nazi crimes Henry Friedlander
2. The setting and significance of the Nuremberg trials: a historian’s perspective Gerhard Weinberg
3. The American military commission trials of 1945 Patricia Heberer
4. Punishing the excess: sadism, bureaucratized atrocity, and the U.S. army concentration camp trials, 1945-1947 Michael Bryant
5. Perceptions and suppression of Nazi crimes by the postwar German judiciary Joachim Perels
6. Getting away with murder: the Taubner case Dick de Mildt
7. Cold war pressures and the German prosecution of Wehmacht war crimes: the case of Cephalonia, 1943 Natha Stotzfus
8. The trials of Nazi war criminals in Austria Wilfried R. Garscha
9. The German-German rivalry and the prosecution of Nazi war criminals during the cold war, 1958–1965 Annette Weinke
10. History in the courthouse: the presentation of World War II crimes in U.S. courts 50 years later Elizabeth B. White
11. Law, history, and Holocaust denial in the courtroom: the Zundel and Irving cases Christopher R. Browning.