Abstract Tokyo Trial is a historical TV series on the International Military Tribunal for the Far East in Tokyo. Its heroes are the audacious dissenting judges Pal and Röling—a rare choice that seems to point to a critical counter-narrative of international criminal justice. This article suggests multiple readings of Tokyo Trial that open up historiographical and ideological struggles beneath the tropes of an entertaining ‘docu-drama’.Peer reviewe
Those tried for crimes against humanity have often been usurpers of State power, or committed crimes...
A lasting legacy of the Nuremberg and Tokyo military tribunals is the assertion that individuals are...
https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/facsch_bk_contributions/1381/thumbnail.jp
Abstract Tokyo Trial is a historical TV series on the International Military Tribunal for the Far Ea...
Until comparatively recently (see, eg., The Other Nuremberg by Arnold C. Brackman, 1987) there has b...
The aim of this new collection of essays is to engage in analysis beyond the familiar victor’s justi...
This paper examines the evolution of the doctrine of conspiracy during the course of the trial at th...
This dissertation explores the inner-workings of the International Military Tribunal for the Far Eas...
The second World War raged on from 1937 (1939 in Europe) until the surrender of the Japanese in Sept...
In his dissenting judgment in the Tokyo trial (the International Military Tribunal for the Far East)...
Between April 29, 1946 and November 12, 1948 the International Military Tribunal for the Far East c...
International criminal prosecutions for serious violations of human rights are not only connected to...
Nearly six decades have passed since the International Military Tribunal for the Far East handed dow...
This article begins by first focusing on the Tokyo IMT\u27s heritage of collective forgetting in rel...
"In the weeks after Japan finally surrendered to the Allies, the world turned to the question of how...
Those tried for crimes against humanity have often been usurpers of State power, or committed crimes...
A lasting legacy of the Nuremberg and Tokyo military tribunals is the assertion that individuals are...
https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/facsch_bk_contributions/1381/thumbnail.jp
Abstract Tokyo Trial is a historical TV series on the International Military Tribunal for the Far Ea...
Until comparatively recently (see, eg., The Other Nuremberg by Arnold C. Brackman, 1987) there has b...
The aim of this new collection of essays is to engage in analysis beyond the familiar victor’s justi...
This paper examines the evolution of the doctrine of conspiracy during the course of the trial at th...
This dissertation explores the inner-workings of the International Military Tribunal for the Far Eas...
The second World War raged on from 1937 (1939 in Europe) until the surrender of the Japanese in Sept...
In his dissenting judgment in the Tokyo trial (the International Military Tribunal for the Far East)...
Between April 29, 1946 and November 12, 1948 the International Military Tribunal for the Far East c...
International criminal prosecutions for serious violations of human rights are not only connected to...
Nearly six decades have passed since the International Military Tribunal for the Far East handed dow...
This article begins by first focusing on the Tokyo IMT\u27s heritage of collective forgetting in rel...
"In the weeks after Japan finally surrendered to the Allies, the world turned to the question of how...
Those tried for crimes against humanity have often been usurpers of State power, or committed crimes...
A lasting legacy of the Nuremberg and Tokyo military tribunals is the assertion that individuals are...
https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/facsch_bk_contributions/1381/thumbnail.jp