International law and the Holocaust
TítuloInternational law and the Holocaust
Autor
Call numberP341.6/001
Número del objeto02712
Lugar de publicaciónWashington, District of Columbia, United States
Año de publicación
2003
MaterialLoose-leaf
SerieJoseph and Rebecca Meyerhoff Lecture Series
NotesOccasional Paper for the Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies
Descripción
The author argues that the Holocaust had at least one good outcome: following the Nuremberg Trials (1945) the scope of international law widened to include "crimes against humanity." However the Nuremberg proceedings failed to specifically isolate the crime of genocide. The promulgation of the UN Charter in 1945 followed by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 marked the start of modern international human rights law. The final step in this process was the foundation of the International Criminal Court in 2002.