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"These historically significant documents have been selected by the Rutgers Journal of Law & Religion from the Donovan collection, which is kept at the Cornell University School of Law Library. By
"Rutgers Journal of Law & Religion will post documents from the Donovan collection to its website approximately every six months. Scholarly commentary on these postings will be published on a rolling bas
"The Harvard Law School Library has approximately one million pages of documents relating to the trial of military and political leaders of Nazi Germany before the International Military Tribunal (IMT) a
Quellensammlung "Dokumente des Zweiten Weltkriegs" innerhalb des "Avalon Projekts" der Yale Law School. Ein Suchregister ermöglicht die Volltextsuche in der Quellensammlung.
"The National Archives, which covers England, Wales and the United Kingdom, was formed in April 2003 by bringing together the Public Record Office and the Historical Manuscripts Commission. It is responsible fo
»nach Auschwitz« Gerrit Walther 169 Angry Old Man Harold J. Berman, Law and Revolution, II. The Impact of the Protestant Reformations on the Western Legal Tradition ... Zur Entstehung des zweiten Hauptteils der Reichs- verfassung vom 14. August 1919 Thorsten Keiser 189 Law after Auschwitz – Law in Auschwitz? David Fraser, Law after Auschwitz. Towards a Jurisprudence of the Holocaust Stefan*Ludwig Hoffmann 191 OpferdesFaschismusunddesAntifaschismus
"The National Security Archive combines a unique range of functions in one non governmental, non-profit institution. The Archive is simultaneously a research institute on international affairs, a library and ar
Abkommen zwischen Großbritannien und der UdSSR vom 12. 7. 1941 in englischer Sprache
suspended, and later rescinded the authorization. Hungarian Jews felt that a statue honoring the man who, in his first stint (1920-21) as Miklos Horthy's prime minister, introduced the 22 September 1920 "numerus clausus" law in universities -- the first such law to be introduced in Europe, see Lendvai, 1999, p. 395 -- was a slap in the face. Under Teleki's second (1939-41) term, previously enacted, relatively mild legislation on who was to be considered Jewish was replaced by a much harsher law stipulating that anyone with one parent born into the Jewish faith was to be considered a Jew (Janos, 1982, p. 302). Teleki was apparently also involved in the drafting of the "First Jewish Law," under the 1938-39 radical-right government of Kalman Daranyi -- this time establishing quotas for Jews allowed to practice business and the liberal professions.
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