Results 51 to 60 of about 2,054 (213)

La negación o justificación del genocidio como delito en el Derecho europeo. Una propuesta a la luz de la Recomendación n.º 15 de la ECRI // The Denial or Justification of Genocide as a Criminal Offense in European Law. A proposal taking in account the Re

open access: yesRevista de Derecho Político, 2017
Resumen: En este artículo se analiza la normativa de la UE y del Consejo de Europa, así como la jurisprudencia del TEDH, sobre la penalización de la negación o justificación de los genocidios, concretamente del Holocausto de los judíos a manos de los ...
María Elósegui Itxaso
doaj   +1 more source

Doing Business in Zones of Legal Risk: Patterns of Corporate Involvement in Atrocity Crimes Since World War II

open access: yesRegulation &Governance, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Involvement of corporations in international crimes and conflict atrocities, such as crimes against humanity, war crimes and genocide, are neither isolated events nor uncommon. Importantly, corporate involvement in atrocity crimes is shaped by conditions in “zones of legal risk” (International Commission of Jurists), where gross human rights ...
Susanne Karstedt   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

Life Unworthy of Life Aktion T4: The First Nazi Genocide

open access: yes, 2023
Though usually viewed as a prelude to the Holocaust, the T4 euthanasia program was a distinct genocide carried out by the Third Reich’s doctors. Allowing themselves to be corrupted by eugenics and Nazi policy, the perpetrators of the Nazi euthanasia ...
Remington, Alexander M.
core  

Facilitating Feeling?: The Relationship between Memorials and Emotions

open access: yesSociological Inquiry, EarlyView.
This article explores if and how national memorials impact collective emotions among local residents, focusing on the National Memorial for Peace and Justice (NMPJ) in Montgomery, Alabama. This understudied question is of sociological importance given the change in federal policy regarding public memorials, particularly the removal of references to ...
Ashley V. Reichelmann, James E. Hawdon
wiley   +1 more source

Facts as a foundation: How people respond to historical atrocities in five countries

open access: yesPolitical Psychology, Volume 47, Issue 4, August 2026.
Abstract Informing people about historical atrocities and injustice is considered critical for sustaining democracies and preventing similar atrocities in the future. Yet, what remains unknown is whether exposure to factual information about ingroups' historical injustices, such as genocide, slavery, or colonial crimes, leads to increased willingness ...
Oguzhan Turkoglu   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

Doctors Gone Bad: Physicians, Dictatorships, and Warrior Cultures

open access: yesSocial Medicine, 2020
During World War 2, the guiding Hegelian philosophy of Nazi Medicine was one of rational utility, meaning “what is useful is right.” Nazi Medicine was essentially an arm of state policy, with a focus on racial purity, beginning with the sterilization of
Martin Donohoe
doaj  

From Olocausto to Shoah: Naming Genocide in 21st-Century Italy

open access: yesModern Languages Open, 2015
The article examines patterns in the terminology used to label the Nazi genocide of the Jews, focussing in particular on the case study of late 20th-century and early 21st-century Italy.
Robert S. C. Gordon
doaj   +1 more source

The Genocide of Roma and Sinti

open access: yesS: I. M. O. N., 2019
It is argued in this paper that Roma and Sinti memories of the genocide during the Second World War did not form a coherent picture of the past that would be widely shared among them.
Sławomir Kapralski
doaj  

Writing Poetry in Yiddish During the Destruction of Gaza? Linguistic Citizenship in a Time of Moral Crisis

open access: yesJournal of Sociolinguistics, Volume 30, Issue 3, Page 341-347, June 2026.
ABSTRACT In this commentary, we foreground the dilemmas that arise when ethics and politics clash. Taking the Yiddish‐language poem Khurbn Aze [lit. The Destruction of Gaza] as our entry point, we argue that Stroud's sociolinguistic notion of linguistic citizenship together with Levinas's moral philosophy can offer a productive theoretical lens for ...
Hannah Lukow, Tommaso M. Milani
wiley   +1 more source

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