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Looks at the trial and participants.
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Online book by historical revisionist David Irving. Sympathetic to the defendants tried at Nuremberg.
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In-depth documentation of the proceedings of The International Military Tribunal with the hearings and findings of 1946, post WWII.
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Many volumes of documents, trial transcripts, and summaries relating to the International Military Tribunal trial of Nazi war criminals at Nuremberg, Germany are being laboriously digitized and made available.
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Biographies of eight notable Nazis convicted in the Nuremberg trial.
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Documents from the International Military Tribunal, Nuremberg. Popularly known as the 'red series.'
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The Atlantic republishes two articles on the Nuremberg trial written in 1946.
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A site dedicated to the explication of the trials of the Nuremberg War Crime Trials.
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Access to digitized photographs, court proceedings, and search engine of analyzed documents in Harvard Law School Library.
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Images and descriptions of the defendants and judges in the tribunal proceedings at the end of WWII.
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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) and to the twelve trials of other accused war criminals before the United States Nuremberg Military Tribunals (NMT). These documents are gradually being digitized and added to this site.
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Information and extensive links.
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Educational resources for teachers and students from Spartacus Schoolnet.
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The trial of sixteen defendants, members of the Reich Ministry of Justice or People's and Special Courts, raised the issue of what responsibility judges might have for enforcing grossly unjust--but arguably binding--laws. The trial was the inspiration for the movie Judgment at Nuremberg.
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Examination of the Nurmeberg War Crimes process.
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Essay on the jurisprudence of the Nuremberg process.
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Code developed at Nuremberg as a result of wartime medical experimentation on humans.
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Code governing war crimes and crimes against humanity developed out of the Nuremberg war crimes process.
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US Holocaust Museum's online exhibit on the trial against 23 leading German physicians and administrators for their willing participation in war crimes and crimes against humanity.
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Documents from the trial of individuals involved in Nazi death squads that executed Jews en masse in occupied sections of the Soviet Union.
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An introduction by Ben Astin.
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Supporting documents.
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Information about the book which publishes interviews and statements by American participants in the trials.