Post-war legacies, 1945-2015: victims, bodies, and brain tissues
TitelPost-war legacies, 1945-2015: victims, bodies, and brain tissues
Forfatter
Call number610.943/0006
Objektnummer09917p
UdgivelsesstedLondon, England
UdgiverRoutledge
Udgivelsesår
2017
Pagineringpp 337-364
MaterialeArticle
SerieThe history of medicine in context
ISBN9781472484611
NoterArticle from the book 'From clinic to concentration camp: reassessing Nazi medical and racial research, 1933-1945' pp 337-364
Beskrivelse
At the close of World War II there was a high level of concern with Nazi human experiments. Allied occupation authorities were concerned about the holding of victim body parts. The Nuremberg Medical Trial prosecuted a set of leading perpetrators of human experiments, among whom were 20 physicians. US prosecutors mounted a series of trials at Dachau when perpetrators were convicted including Claus Schilling for malaria experiments at Dachau, and Helmut Vetter for pharmacological experiments at Mauthausen and Auschwitz. In 1951, Chancellor Adenauer provided a compensation scheme, although there were only a few surviving victims