Introduction, David M. Crowe (Elon University, USA) 1. Late Imperial and Soviet ‘Show’ Trials, 1878-1938, David M. Crowe (Elon University, USA) 2. Traitors or War Criminals: Collaboration on Trial in Soviet Courts in the 1940s, Alexander V. Prusin (New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology, USA) 3. 'Nikto ne zabyt': The Politicization of Soviet War Dead, Thomas Earl Porter (North Carolina A&T State University, USA) 4. The Human Face of Soviet Justice: Aron Trainin and the Origins of the Soviet Doctrine of International Criminal Law, Valentyna Polunina (Heidelberg University, Germany) 5. 'May Justice be Done!': The Soviet Union and the London Conference (1945), Irina Schulmeister-André (Independent Scholar, Germany) 6. The Soviet Union at the Palace of Justice: Law, Intrigue, and International Rivalry in the Nuremberg Trials, Francine Hirsch (University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA) 7. Soviet Journalists at Nuremberg: Establishing the Soviet War Narrative, Jeremy Hicks (Queen Mary University of London, UK) 8. From Geneva to Nuremberg to New York: Andrei Vyshinsky, Raphaël Lemkin, and the Struggle to Outlaw Revolutionary Violence, State Terror, and Genocide, Douglas Irvin-Erickson (George Mason University, USA) Select Bibliography Index
An exploration of the interrelationship between Soviet legal ideas and practices in the varius 'show' trials in the 1920s and 1930s and the role played by Soviet jurists in the London Conference and the Nuremberg IMT trial.
David M. Crowe is Presidential Fellow at Chapman University, USA and Professor Emeritus of History & Law at Elon University, USA. He is the author of numerous books, including War Crimes, Genocide, and Justice: A Global History (2013), The Holocaust: Roots, History, and Aftermath (2008), and Oskar Schindler: The Untold Story of His Life, Wartime Activities, and the True Story Behind the List (2004). David M. Crowe’s books have been translated into six languages.
The volume, especially the chapters by Irina
Schulmeister-André/David M. Crowe, Francine Hirsch, and Jeremy
Hicks excel in highlighting these complex interdependencies between
power politics, legal positions, court proceedings, and official
reconstructions of the past.
*H-Russia*
[It] rightfully re-orients the Soviet legal system and its leading
minds into the center of the creation of post-World War II
international law.
*EuropeNow*
This is no dry account of disputes over points of law; here, we
learn of the conflicts, disappointments, and victories of real
people that takes us beyond the stereotypes of the lawyers as
puppets of the Kremlin or journalists churning out propaganda. The
result is an intellectually-satisfying account both of the familiar
story of the failed attempt of the USSR to use the Nuremburg trials
to control the narrative of its role in the Second World War and of
the lasting contribution that Soviet legal scholarship made to the
development of international law.
*Prof Judith Pallot, University of Oxford, UK*
Stalin’s Soviet Justice makes a significant contribution to our
understanding of the theory and practice of criminal justice and
political repression in the USSR, shedding valuable light on the
important Soviet contributions to the development of international
criminal law and legal institutions after World War II.
*Prof Jonathan Daly, University of Illinois, USA*
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