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This innovative volume examines the nexus between war crimes trials
and the pursuit of collaborators in post-war Asia. Global standards
of behaviour in time of war underpinned the prosecution of Japanese
military personnel in Allied courts in Asia and the Pacific.
Japan's contradictory roles in the Second World War as brutal
oppressor of conquered regions in Asia and as liberator of Asia
from both Western colonialism and stultifying tradition set the
stage for a tangled legal and political debate: just where did
colonized and oppressed peoples owe their loyalties in time of war?
And where did the balance of responsibility lie between individuals
and nations? But global standards jostled uneasily with the
pluralism of the Western colonial order in Asia, where legal rights
depended on race and nationality. In the end, these limits led to
profound dissatisfaction with the trials process, despite its vast
scale and ambitious intentions, which has implications until today.
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