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Jahresbericht 2018
Herausgeber:
Institut für Zeitgeschichte München–Berlin, Prof. Dr. Andreas Wirsching;
Redaktion:
Simone Paulmichl, Kristina Milz, Kerstin Schwenke
Lektorat: Angelika Reizl
from the main commission for the investigation of German crimes in Poland to the Institute of National Remembrance
Political and transitional justice in Germany, Poland and the Soviet Union from the 1930s to the 1950s
History shows a plethora of links between the apparently distinct terms of Political and Transitional Justice.
Focussing on »Political and Transitional Justice in Germany, Poland the USSR from the 1930s to the 1950s« this volume presents papers organized by the editors to demonstrate the importance of cooperation in research beyond national borders. The articles reflect the need for constant awareness of the challenges of Political Justice as a topic not just of historical importance but with relevance to present-day negotiations of the past
German Yearbook of Contemporary History, volume 4, 2019
Since 1945, Germany’s role in the project of European integration has been central for the continent’s economic and political development. The fourth volume of the German Yearbook of Contemporary History, edited by Mark Gilbert (Johns Hopkins University Bologna), Eva Oberloskamp and Thomas Raithel (both Leibniz Institute for Contemporary History), assembles articles, which have been published previously in the Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte, and specially commissioned contributions. The chapters cover a wide range of topics. The theories and visions of European integration that were articulated after World War II are the starting point for the volume. The period embraced by the book stretches to the earliest stages of European Economic and Monetary Union, which received substantial momentum from German unifi cation in 1989/90
German Reich, 1933-1937
Volume 1 documents the persecution of the Jews between 1933 and 1937. The sources, which are presented chronologically, illustrate the ways in which the Jews in Germany were disenfranchised and excluded from society, as well as the role played by terror, political strategy, and the widespread indifference of non-Jewish Germans