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The Nuremberg War Crimes Trial and its Policy Consequences Today / Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis
The Nuremberg War Crimes Trial and its Policy Consequences Today / Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis
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1–12
Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis
1–12
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13–20
Introduction: The Legacy of Nuremberg
Beth A. Griech-Polelle
Beth A. Griech-Polelle
13–20
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21–132
Section I: The Immediate Postwar Trials and Their Short-Term Effects
21–132
21–40
On the Way to Nuremberg: The Soviets Commission for the Investigation of Nazi War Crimes
Marina Yu. Sorokina
Marina Yu. Sorokina
21–40
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1941: First Initiatives
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1942: New Challenges
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The Choice
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41–54
German Participation in the Nuremberg Trials and Its Implications for Today
Christoph J. M. Safferling
Christoph J. M. Safferling
41–54
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I. The Attitude towards the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg during and for Forty Years after the Trials
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Problems with the Nuremberg Trial
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Prosecution of Nazis in West-Germany
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Prosecution of Nazis in East Germany
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II. The Attitude after German Unification
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III. Closing Remarks
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55–70
The Appropriation by German Courts in French-occupied Baden of Control Council Law No. 10’s Definition of Crimes against Humanity in the Prosecution of Nazi-era Defendants, 1946–1951
Michael S. Bryant
Michael S. Bryant
55–70
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Conclusion
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71–82
“Violation of Human Dignity” and Other Crimes Against Humanity in Austrian War Crimes Trials
Winfried R. Garscha
Winfried R. Garscha
71–82
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83–102
Brother, Black Sheep, or Bastard? Situating the Tokyo War Crimes Trial in the Nuremberg Legacy, 1946–1948
James Burnham Sedgwick
James Burnham Sedgwick
83–102
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Brother
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Black Sheep
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Bastard
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True (Shared?) Legacy
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103–132
The Nuremberg Trials and American Jurisprudence: The Decline of Legal Realism, the Revival of Natural Law, and the Development of Legal Process Theory
Rodger D. Citron
Rodger D. Citron
103–132
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Introduction
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I. Situating American Legal Realism
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A. The Emergence of Legal Realism as a Response to Formalism
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B. Positivism, Natural Law, and Legal Realism
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II. Jerome Frank, Law and the Modern Mind, and Legal Realism
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III. World War II, the Nuremberg Trials, the Decline of Legal Realism, and the Revival of Natural Law Theory
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IV. The Nuremberg Trials and the Development of Legal Process Theory
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V. The Nuremberg Trials and Brown v. Board of Education
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Conclusion
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133–270
Section II: The Present-Day Impact of Nuremberg on International Law
133–270
133–158
The International Criminal Court and the Ethics of Selective Justice
Aaron Fichtelberg
Aaron Fichtelberg
133–158
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The Concept of Selective Prosecution
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Justifiable vs. Unjustifiable Selectivity in Criminal Justice
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Selectivity in Doctrine and Practice
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Does the ICC have Unjust Selectivity?
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Conclusion
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159–192
The United Nations War Crimes Commission: A Model for Complementarity today?
Dan Plesch, Leah Owen
Dan Plesch, Leah Owen
159–192
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The History of the UNWCC
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The Policy Significance of the UNWCC today: Complementarity and Institutional Model
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Technical Assistance
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Legitimation
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Verification
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Conclusion
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193–238
In Search of Imperfect Justice: Genocidal Rape and the Legacy of Nuremberg and Tokyo
Tazreena Sajjad
Tazreena Sajjad
193–238
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Introduction
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Laying the Foundation: Early Developments in Criminalizing War-time Rape and Sexual Violence
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The Nuremberg and Tokyo Trials: Rape and Sexual Violence as Violations of IHL
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The Nuremberg Trial
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The International Military Tribunal for the Far East (IMTFE) or the Tokyo Trials
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The Prohibition of Wartime Rape and Sexual Violence: Additional Sources
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The Geneva Conventions and its Additional Protocols
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ICL, IHRL, Customary Law and Wartime Rape and Sexual Violence
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Rape and Sexual Violence as Genocide: Establishing the Legal Framework
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The ICTY, the ICTR and Wartime Rape and Sexual Violence
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The Akayesu Judgement
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A Bridge Too Far? Trying Rape and Sexual Violence as Genocide at the ICC
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Whither Rape as Genocide?
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Building on the Legacy: Rape as Genocide, the ICC and Beyond
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239–258
The Documentary Record of Nuremberg in the Twenty-First Century
Judith Haran
Judith Haran
239–258
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Origins: From Chaos to Order … more or less
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From Documents to Convictions
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Finding Homes for 100 Tons of Records
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Uses of the Trials’ Record
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Trial Records in the Modern Era: The Case of Harvard Law School
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The Collection: Making All of this Paper Accessible
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A Look at Other Online Collections
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Linked Repositories: Still in the Future
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Is the Future of Research Online?
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APPENDIX A
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APPENDIX B
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259–270
United States Military Law of War Doctrine: Making the International Criminal Court Irrelevant to the Ground Combat Forces of the United States in the Early Twenty-First Century
Rex A. Childers
Rex A. Childers
259–270
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271–274
Subject Index
271–274
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The Nuremberg War Crimes Trial and its Policy Consequences Today , page 1 - 12
Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis
Autoren
Beth A. Griech-Polelle (Ed.)
DOI
doi.org/10.5771/9783845280400-1
ISBN print: 978-3-8487-3688-1
ISBN online: 978-3-8452-8040-0
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