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LEVAL, PIERRE N (1) answer(s).
 
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Long arm of international law: giving victims of human rights abuses their day in court / Leval, Pierre N   Journal Article
Leval, Pierre N Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract In late 1945, the Allied victors of World War II established a military tribunal in Nuremberg, Germany, which convicted Nazi leaders for their wartime atrocities. The animating principle of the trials was that conduct of extreme inhumanity violated the part of international law that protects fundamental human rights, which applies everywhere, even though the conduct was authorized by German law under the Third Reich. Since then, the world has accepted that the worst human rights abuses -- including genocide, slavery, torture, and war crimes -- are crimes prohibited by international law, even if they are expressly permitted by the laws of the state in which they occur.
Key Words Human Rights  Germany  War Crimes  Genocide  Slavery  Military Tribunal 
German Law  International Law  World War II 
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