It is beyond doubt that the legal system established by the Nazi government in Germany between 1933-1945 represented a gross departure from the rule of law: the Nazis eradicated legal security and certainty; allowed for judicial and state arbitrariness; blocked epistemic access to what the law requires; issued unpredictable legal requirements; and so on. This introduction outlines the distorted nature of the Nazi legal system and looks at the main factors that contributed to this grave divergence
The article compares the legal methodologies in the National Socialist State (NS, 1933–1945) and in ...
The question of whether Nazi law was valid law has been at the background of jurisprudential discour...
Sixty years after the Nuremberg Trials, the Nuremberg legacy is part of modern international law. ...
It is beyond doubt that the legal system established by the Nazi government in Germany between 1933-...
Ingo Muller\u27s book, originally published in 1987 as Furchtbare Juristen: Die unbewaltigte Vergang...
This chapter explores how Nazi law and legal institutions helped to construct the atmosphere of ideo...
This chapter is focused on exploring and interrogating key elements of the interpretation of Nazi la...
The nature and role of law in the Third Reich is a theme that has been the subject of many studies a...
This chapter advances the claim that, notwithstanding the important instrumental element to the Nazi...
Discussions of Nazi law in legal philosophy are most commonly concerned with how the Nazis' use of l...
THE INFLUENCE OF THE NAZI IDEOLOGY ON THE GERMAN JUDICIAL SYSTEM IN THE GENERAL GOVERNMENT DURING TH...
The question of whether Nazi law was valid law has been at the background of jurisprudential discour...
This paper seeks to draw attention to the similarities displayed in the manner in which Soviet Russi...
The Nazi regime had loyal judges who willingly transformed the liberal German law into an instrument...
Authoritarian legalism: Some Thoughts on "The Remnants of the Rechtsstaat: An Ethnography of Nazi L...
The article compares the legal methodologies in the National Socialist State (NS, 1933–1945) and in ...
The question of whether Nazi law was valid law has been at the background of jurisprudential discour...
Sixty years after the Nuremberg Trials, the Nuremberg legacy is part of modern international law. ...
It is beyond doubt that the legal system established by the Nazi government in Germany between 1933-...
Ingo Muller\u27s book, originally published in 1987 as Furchtbare Juristen: Die unbewaltigte Vergang...
This chapter explores how Nazi law and legal institutions helped to construct the atmosphere of ideo...
This chapter is focused on exploring and interrogating key elements of the interpretation of Nazi la...
The nature and role of law in the Third Reich is a theme that has been the subject of many studies a...
This chapter advances the claim that, notwithstanding the important instrumental element to the Nazi...
Discussions of Nazi law in legal philosophy are most commonly concerned with how the Nazis' use of l...
THE INFLUENCE OF THE NAZI IDEOLOGY ON THE GERMAN JUDICIAL SYSTEM IN THE GENERAL GOVERNMENT DURING TH...
The question of whether Nazi law was valid law has been at the background of jurisprudential discour...
This paper seeks to draw attention to the similarities displayed in the manner in which Soviet Russi...
The Nazi regime had loyal judges who willingly transformed the liberal German law into an instrument...
Authoritarian legalism: Some Thoughts on "The Remnants of the Rechtsstaat: An Ethnography of Nazi L...
The article compares the legal methodologies in the National Socialist State (NS, 1933–1945) and in ...
The question of whether Nazi law was valid law has been at the background of jurisprudential discour...
Sixty years after the Nuremberg Trials, the Nuremberg legacy is part of modern international law. ...