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Since the nineteenth century, the development of international
humanitarian law has been marked by complex entanglements of legal
theory, historical trauma, criminal prosecution, historiography,
and politics. All of these factors have played a role in changing
views on the applicability of international law and human-rights
ideas to state-organized violence, which in turn have been largely
driven by transnational responses to German state crimes. Here,
Annette Weinke gives a groundbreaking long-term history of the
political, legal and academic debates concerning German state and
mass violence in the First World War, during the National Socialist
era and the Holocaust, and under the GDR.
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