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The Trial of the Germans: An Account of the Twenty-two Defendants before the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg
Publisher: University of Missouri | ISBN: 0826211399 | edition 1997 | CHM | 696 pages | 1,7 mb
The \"definitive one-volume study of Nuremberg,\" The Trial of the Germans is now available in paperback. An astute observer of the Nuremberg trial, Eugene Davidson has struggled with the issues it raised: Was it a necessary response to the heinous crimes of the Third Reich? How were Germany and the Germans capable of such extraordinary evil? Was the trial just, given the claims that the defendants were simply serving their country, doing as they had been told to do? And if not just, was it nonetheless necessary as a warning to prevent future crimes against humanity? Davidson's approach to these and other large questions of justice is made through examination of each of the defendants in the trial. His reluctant, but firm, conclusion is: \"In a world of mixed human affairs where a rough justice is done that is better than lynching or being shot out of hand, Nuremberg may be defended as a political event if not as a court.\" Some sentences may have seemed too severe, but none was harsher than the punishments meted out to innocent people by the regime these men served.
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