While this note focuses on Nazi war criminals living in the United States, it calls for international cooperation in prosecuting war criminals. It traces the history of post-war agreements relating to the prosecution of Nazi war criminals, and their application at the Nuremberg Trials. This note then examines how Nazi war criminals entered the United States following World War II, and how they have lived here for four decades virtually unnoticed. Additionally, this note analyzes the recent efforts of the Office of Special Investigations (OSI), a branch of the Department of Justice, to prosecute Nazi war criminals living in the United States. Finally, this note argues that justice is best served through a rebirth of the spirit embodied ...
Following the release of disturbing photographs from Abu Ghraib, the Center for Constitutional Right...
Submitted to the Undergraduate Library Research Award scholarship competition: (2016-2017). 64 pag...
Crimes of war pose an inherent contradiction. They demand justice, but we find ourselves uneasy at p...
The purpose of this Note is to demonstrate that the United States can and must assert jurisdiction o...
In 1945, with the world still reeling from World War II, the trial of the major German war criminals...
Up until 1979, the ability of West German courts to prosecute Nazi war criminals was hampered by a S...
Years after the prosecution of Nazi and Japanese war criminals, the United Nations created an Intern...
The genesis of the trial of the major German war criminals at the end of World War II was the Moscow...
Up until 1979, the ability of West German courts to prosecute Nazi war criminals was hampered by a S...
This article uses a micro-historical methodology to examine some of the complex problems of bringing...
One means to enhance the prospects for bringing indicted war criminals to justice is to promote adop...
World War II cost the lives of approximately 55 million people, mostly civilian non-combatants, and ...
A lasting legacy of the Nuremberg and Tokyo military tribunals is the assertion that individuals are...
The subject of war crimes is now receiving significant attention. On March 13, 1998, the United Stat...
The London Charter, signed in August 1945 by Allied leaders to establish the International Military ...
Following the release of disturbing photographs from Abu Ghraib, the Center for Constitutional Right...
Submitted to the Undergraduate Library Research Award scholarship competition: (2016-2017). 64 pag...
Crimes of war pose an inherent contradiction. They demand justice, but we find ourselves uneasy at p...
The purpose of this Note is to demonstrate that the United States can and must assert jurisdiction o...
In 1945, with the world still reeling from World War II, the trial of the major German war criminals...
Up until 1979, the ability of West German courts to prosecute Nazi war criminals was hampered by a S...
Years after the prosecution of Nazi and Japanese war criminals, the United Nations created an Intern...
The genesis of the trial of the major German war criminals at the end of World War II was the Moscow...
Up until 1979, the ability of West German courts to prosecute Nazi war criminals was hampered by a S...
This article uses a micro-historical methodology to examine some of the complex problems of bringing...
One means to enhance the prospects for bringing indicted war criminals to justice is to promote adop...
World War II cost the lives of approximately 55 million people, mostly civilian non-combatants, and ...
A lasting legacy of the Nuremberg and Tokyo military tribunals is the assertion that individuals are...
The subject of war crimes is now receiving significant attention. On March 13, 1998, the United Stat...
The London Charter, signed in August 1945 by Allied leaders to establish the International Military ...
Following the release of disturbing photographs from Abu Ghraib, the Center for Constitutional Right...
Submitted to the Undergraduate Library Research Award scholarship competition: (2016-2017). 64 pag...
Crimes of war pose an inherent contradiction. They demand justice, but we find ourselves uneasy at p...