Part 1: German Rule in the Occupied Territories 1942-1945Hans
Umbreit:
Foreword
1: Hitler's Europe
2: The Impact of 'Total War' on German Rule in the Occupied
Countries
3: The Ethnic 'New Order' through Genocide: The Murder of the Jews,
Roma, and Sinti in the German Sphere of Power
4: Collaboration and Resistance
Part 2: Albert Speer and Armaments Policy in Total WarRolf-Dieter
Müller:
1: The German War Economy in Upheaval: 1942
2: Further Centralization of the War Economy 1943-1944
3: Basic Conditions of Wartime Production, and Civilian Factors
4: The 'Armaments Miracle' 1942-1944
5: From 'Victory Programme' to the Collapse of the War Economy
Part 3: Management of Human Resources, Deployment of the
Population, and Manning the Armed Forces in the Second Half of the
War 1942-1944Bernhard R. Kroener:
1: In the Eye of the Storm (Summer 1942 to Spring 1943)
2: Not Quite Total War (Summer 1943 to Summer 1944)
3: Resumé
ConclusionBernhard R. Kroener, Rolf-Dieter Müller Hans Umbreit:
Bibliography
Index of Persons
Bernhard R. Kroener, Research Institute of
Military History, Potsdam, , Rolf-Dieter Muller, Research Institute
of Military History, Potsdam
Hans Umbreit, Research Institute of Military History, Potsdam
Project co-ordinated by the Militargeschichtliches Forschungsamt (Research Institute for Military History), Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany
Translated from the German by Derry Cook-Radmore, Ewald Osers,
Barry Smerin, and Barbara Wilson
The volume is supported by helpful diagrams and maps and offers fascinating insights on a range of related topics. History the latest volume of Germany and the Second World War slices open the German war effort and examines the inner workings of war administration, economy, and manpower resources, 1942-1944/ ... every page is packed with a dense compilation of information and analysis ... a rigorous, academic analysis packed with information impossible to find elsewhere in English, and it also forms an integral part of an exceedingly important series of books about Germany's role in the world conflict. We can't recommend it to the casual reader, but it certainly belongs on the shelf of every serious historian of World War II as part of the ultimate autopsy of the German war effort. Stone & Stone
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