From 1978-1996 Holocaust denial emerged as a major concern for the
liberal democracies of Europe and North America. This period also
saw the first prosecutions of Holocaust deniers. But these
prosecutions often ran into trouble. Holocaust Denial and the Law
relates how courts in four countries (Canada, France, Germany and
the United States) resolved the dilemmas posed by Holocaust-denial
litigation. It also describes how, in the United States, student
editors had to decide whether to run ads denying the Holocaust. The
book concludes that a given country's resolution of these dilemmas
turns on its specific legal traditions and historical experiences.
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