This Article provides an overview of the process leading up to the first comprehensive German-Jewish reparations agreements in order to give a historical context to the contemporary discussion of Holocaust-related reparations and restitution. The Article further attempts to shed some light on the behind-the-scenes role played by Josef Rosensaft, one of the individuals involved in the early stages of the reparations negotiations, and his parallel efforts to remedy the 1950-1951 denial of compensation payments to some 18,000 Jewish DP\u27s by the German Land (State) of Lower Saxony
Notes for a planned article about laws and regulations concerning Jews in Nazi-occupied and allied E...
During the World War II entire nation-ethnic groups had been politically repressed. Germans, whose a...
The article deals with the German-Jewish discourse focussing on the decade before the unification of...
The post-World War II German-Israeli reparations program is the largest, most comprehensive reparati...
This book about the reparations issue (Wiedergutmachung in German shilumim in Hebrew) brings togethe...
After the Holocaust, 250,000 Jewish survivors settled into Displaced Persons (DPs) centers throughou...
The robbery and restitution of Jewish property are two inextricably linked social processes. It is n...
Nietzel B. Restitution, Memory and Denial: Assessing the Legacy of Dispossession in Postwar Germany....
This article discusses the legal challenges for implementing settlements for Holocaust reparation cl...
This book about the reparations issue ("shilumim" in Hebrew) brings together selected protocols of a...
The contribution contains a comprehensive presentation of the legal regulations for the indemnificat...
Holocaust Restitution is the first volume to present the Holocaust restitution movement directly fro...
This article summarizes the legal, historical and political developments in regards to the issue of ...
The paper chronicles the development and history of Jewish self-government in Germany through the tw...
On first sight, a comparison between restitution for Nazi victims in Germany West and East does not ...
Notes for a planned article about laws and regulations concerning Jews in Nazi-occupied and allied E...
During the World War II entire nation-ethnic groups had been politically repressed. Germans, whose a...
The article deals with the German-Jewish discourse focussing on the decade before the unification of...
The post-World War II German-Israeli reparations program is the largest, most comprehensive reparati...
This book about the reparations issue (Wiedergutmachung in German shilumim in Hebrew) brings togethe...
After the Holocaust, 250,000 Jewish survivors settled into Displaced Persons (DPs) centers throughou...
The robbery and restitution of Jewish property are two inextricably linked social processes. It is n...
Nietzel B. Restitution, Memory and Denial: Assessing the Legacy of Dispossession in Postwar Germany....
This article discusses the legal challenges for implementing settlements for Holocaust reparation cl...
This book about the reparations issue ("shilumim" in Hebrew) brings together selected protocols of a...
The contribution contains a comprehensive presentation of the legal regulations for the indemnificat...
Holocaust Restitution is the first volume to present the Holocaust restitution movement directly fro...
This article summarizes the legal, historical and political developments in regards to the issue of ...
The paper chronicles the development and history of Jewish self-government in Germany through the tw...
On first sight, a comparison between restitution for Nazi victims in Germany West and East does not ...
Notes for a planned article about laws and regulations concerning Jews in Nazi-occupied and allied E...
During the World War II entire nation-ethnic groups had been politically repressed. Germans, whose a...
The article deals with the German-Jewish discourse focussing on the decade before the unification of...