War Crimes, Trials and Investigations

About
war crimes

This network was funded from Nov 2013 to Dec 2015.

War crimes investigations and trials are fundamentally important processes: they legitimise international action against perpetrators; they determine how a post-conflict society is structured; and they inform the development of the international laws of war concerning prevention and intervention. They have been studied from various disciplinary perspectives, each of which has its drawbacks and limitations, as well as its specific points of focus.  The subject is so complex that it leads inevitably to the crossing of disciplinary boundaries – from History into Law, from Social Psychology into International Relations – but as yet there is little systematic dialogue between these approaches. In short, numerous disciplines build upon each other’s works, but with little interaction and hence very limited understanding of their respective foundations.

 

Our research network specifically intended to address this shortcoming and, over the course of two conferences, brought together researchers from numerous backgrounds to discuss these issues, focusing on, rather than side-stepping, the crucial points of confluence between disciplines. From these sessions we produced an edited collection of articles, which aimed to showcase different approaches as well as the illuminating potential of collaborative exchange.

Contact:

Jonathan Waterlow

Jacques Schuhmacher

Image: Katyń, 1943: Nazi investigators demonstrate their evidence to international observers.

 

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War Crimes, Trials and Investigations

 
 
War Crimes, Trials and Investigations Seminar Series – A series of 8 seminars 
 
Leila Ulrich (University of Oxford) "Challenging the Global-Local Divide" (January 2015) 
Speaker: Jan Lemnitzer 
 
From ‘Atrocity’ to ‘War Crimes’: The 19th Century Origins of Modern War Crime Tribunals (January 2015) 
Speaker: Jan Lemnitzer 
 
Legal Flows and Travelling Lawyers: Debating a Global War Crimes Trials Policy in Europe and Asia during the Second World War (February 2015) 
Speaker: Kirsten von Lingen 
 
The Next Geneva Convention: Morality, Law, and The Limits of Post-War Rehabilitation (February 2015) 
Speaker: Brian Orend 
 
Theoretical and Ideological Underpinnings of War Crimes Investigations in Postwar Germany (February 2015) 
Speaker: Annette Weinke 
 
Crime and Punishment? German crimes and Stalin's justice during and after World War II (February 2015) 
Speaker: Andreas Hilger 
 
A Matter of Justice or a Political Show? Soviet Show Trials Against German POWs in 1943 (March 2015) 
Speaker: Nikita Petrov 
 
Do Anthropologists Give the Dead a Voice, Or Are They Just Ventriloquists...? (March 2015) 
Speaker: Tim Thompson 
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