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Top Posts & Pages
- A Bizarre Snowball's Chance in Hell: Kenya Asks Security Council to Terminate Kenyatta Case at the ICC
- A Genocide in Northern Uganda? – The ‘Protected Camps’ Policy of 1999 to 2006
- Information is Beautiful, International Criminal Justice Style
- Has Social Media Successfully Reinvented Social Activism?
- Backstage at the ICC: A Review of 'The Court'
- Is the ICC Racist?
- The ICC and North Korea: Let's Talk Justice
- Transitional Justice as Politics
- The Power and Politics of Transitional Justice
- What Went Wrong During the Lubanga Trial
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Category Archives: Nuremberg
A ‘Shot’ of Canada at the Nuremberg Trials
Dear readers, I recently had the unforgettable opportunity of visiting the premises of the Nuremberg International Military Tribunals, where senior officials of the Nazi regime – including Herman Goering, Rudolph Hess and Albert Speer, amongst others – were tried following … Continue reading
Posted in Canada, International Law, Justice, Nuremberg, Nuremberg Trials
Tagged William Lyon Mackenzie King
1 Comment
The Politics of International Criminal Justice – A Review
While the International Criminal Court (ICC) is currently celebrating its tenth year anniversary, we still know remarkably little about the Court’s relationship with the international community of states. This is not to say that scholarship has entirely overlooked how states … Continue reading
A Few Thoughts on ‘Nuremberg: Its Lessons for Today’
Over the weekend, I had the opportunity to see a screening of the Schulberg/Waletzky restoration of the film, Nuremberg – Its Lessons for Today. The film provides a fascinating insight into the infamous International Military Tribunal, which was held from … Continue reading
Posted in Film, Holocaust, Nuremberg, Nuremberg Trials
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