Results 311 to 320 of about 5,767,959 (377)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Abstract This book explains why concentration camps were created, and how they changed radically in the course of the twentieth century to become instruments of mass terror and genocide. In popular perception, concentration camps are synonymous with genocide—racial extermination. Yet the great majority of them were not sites of genocide.
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PROHIBITING "AMERICAN CONCENTRATION CAMPS"
Pacific Historical Review, 2005In September 1971 Congress repealed the Emergency Detention Act, Title II of the McCarran Internal Security Act of 1950. This act had authorized the President to apprehend and detain any person suspected as a threat to internal security during a national emergency. This article analyzes the Title II repeal campaign between 1967 and 1971, revealing that
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“Frequent Deaths”: The Colonial Development of Concentration Camps Reconsidered, 1868–1974
, 2018A. Stucki
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Rehabilitation of Concentration Camp Survivors (Following Concentration Camp Trauma)
Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 1969openaire +2 more sources
A Shared Malady: Concentration Camps in the British, Spanish, American and German Empires
, 2016Aidan Forth, Jonas Kreienbaum
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