The Nuremberg Trial Against the Major German War Criminal Before the International Military Tribunal (1945-1946)

Safferling C (2024)


Publication Type: Book chapter / Article in edited volumes

Publication year: 2024

Publisher: Springer

Edited Volumes: Dealing with Totalitarian Regimes and Human Rights

Series: Interdisciplinary Studies Human Rights

Book Volume: 11

Pages Range: 3-18

ISBN: 978-3-031-57337-8

Abstract

The Nuremberg Trial is recognised as the basis of modern international criminal law. In less than one year, the four allied powers which had pursued a costly victory over Nazi Germany presented convincing evidence for the German aggression crimes before the International Military Tribunal. This chapter contains a brief outline of this revolutionary international criminal trial, its accused, the core crimes, and the procedure. It also takes up criticism that was formulated particularly by German defence lawyers, scholars and politicians even decades after the termination of the trials, like the non-retroactivity principle or the ´victors justice´- denunciation. Ultimately, it puts the Nuremberg Trial into the perspective of a further reception of the Nazi past of Germany as well as the development of international criminal law in this respect.

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How to cite

APA:

Safferling, C. (2024). The Nuremberg Trial Against the Major German War Criminal Before the International Military Tribunal (1945-1946). In Max-Emanuel Geis/Adam Bosiacki/Christoph Safferling (Eds.), Dealing with Totalitarian Regimes and Human Rights. (pp. 3-18). Springer.

MLA:

Safferling, Christoph. "The Nuremberg Trial Against the Major German War Criminal Before the International Military Tribunal (1945-1946)." Dealing with Totalitarian Regimes and Human Rights. Ed. Max-Emanuel Geis/Adam Bosiacki/Christoph Safferling, Springer, 2024. 3-18.

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