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Historical Origins of Human Rights

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Title: Historical Origins of Human Rights


1
Historical Origins of Human Rights
  • Lecture 15
  • The Nuremberg Trials
  • Mass Atrocity and
  • Legal Consciousness
  • March 19, 2007

2
outline
  • intro
  • options for transitional justice
  • why trials?
  • facts about the Nuremberg trials
  • the trial scene
  • critiques
  • trials and legality
  • the significance of Nuremberg in history

3
transitional justice
  • a series of options
  • summary execution (shoot your enemies)
  • try them and punish them by law
  • establish facts about past (commission)
  • reconciliation devices
  • example reparations

4
stay the hand of vengeance
  • That four great nations, flushed with victory
    and stung with injury, stay the hand of vengeance
    and voluntarily submit their captive enemies to
    the judgment of the law is one of the most
    significant tributes that Power has ever paid to
    Reason.
  • According to the UDHRs Preamble ..it is
    essential.that human rights should be protected
    by the rule of law

5
evolution of Allied policy
  • FDR and Winston Churchill, 1941 the punishment
    of Nazi crimes should now be counted among the
    major aims of the war.
  • Soviets wartime trials
  • early zonal trials (e.g., British trials at
    Dachau)
  • International Military Tribunal negotiations
    (August 1945 document)

6
IMT four counts
  • conspiracy for world domination
  • aggressive war/crimes against peace
  • war crimes
  • crimes against humanity

7
Justice Robert Jackson
8
who to target?
  • major criminals
  • Jacksons theory proof of conspiracy would allow
    trials to prove membership of each individual
    and, later, of minor criminals
  • many trials in 1940s, in zones and in countries
  • also medical standards (American zonal trial of
    Nazi doctors)
  • problem presentation at centerpiece Nuremberg
    trials of Nazism as a product of fiendish
    archcriminals (household names)

9
Tokyo trial
  • Nuremberg equivalent for Japanese criminals
  • 28 tried, of which 7 were executed (six generals
    and one politician)
  • controversial, for all the Nuremberg reasons, but
    also because the imperial family was exempted
    from justice

10
who were the defendants?
  • Twenty-two individuals, chosen as representative
    of Hitlers enablers, high civilian and military
    leadership, SS chiefs

11
Hermann Göring (before Nuremberg)
12
(at Nuremberg)
13
(in prison)
14
Albert Speer
architect, government minister, expressed remorse
and survived (released in 1966)
15
Julius Streicher
editor of Der Stürmer
16
Nuremberg in 1945
17
Nuremberg palace of justice
18
the courtroom
19
the problem of legality
  • two sources written and unwritten law
  • crimes against peace illegal as a matter of
    international law (Kellogg-Briand pact)
  • war crimes Hague regulations
  • crimes against humanity -- Martens clause and
    unwritten or customary law
  • but what about concerns about ex post facto
    victors justice?

20
conspiracy
American jurisprudence, Justice Jackson, and the
conspiracy charge
21
crimes against peace
  • This inquest represents the practical effort of
    four of the most mighty of nations, with the
    support of 17 more, to utilize international law
    to meet the greatest menace of our time --
    aggressive war. (Jackson, opening statement)
  • Hartley Shawcross the British prosecution

22
war crimes
  • definition of war crimes
  • Hague convention of 1907
  • POWs, civilian hostages
  • other civilian depredations not justified by
    military necessity
  • push to expand definition, from during the war
  • popular consciousness that Nazis had gone beyond
    reasonable standards
  • crimes against humanity
  • cases accorded to French and Soviets and began
    long after spectacular beginning of trial

23
crimes against humanity
  • the mystery of the missing semicolon
  • Article 6(c) Crimes against Humanity namely,
    murder, extermination, enslavement, deportation,
    and other inhumane acts committed against any
    civilian population, before or during the war, or
    persecutions on political, racial or religious
    grounds in execution of or in connection with any
    crime within the jurisdiction of the Tribunal,
    whether or not in violation of the domestic law
    of the country where perpetrated.
  • radical innovation
  • An undisputed gain coming out of Nuremberg is
    the formal recognition that there are crimes
    against humanity (Harry S Truman)
  • selectivity in legal definition ambivalence in
    usage
  • civilization/barbarism

24
real innovation individual guilt
  • Charter Art. 7 The official position of
    defendants, whether as Heads of State or
    responsible officials in Government departments,
    shall not be considered as freeing them of
    responsibility or mitigating punishment
  • Charter Art. 8 The fact that the defendant
    acted pursuant to order of his Government or of a
    superior shall not free him from responsibility
    but may be considered in mitigation of punishment
    if the Tribunal determines that justice so
    requires.
  • but organizations like Nazi party and SS indicted
    too

25
Nazi Concentration Camps documentary
26
justice and pedagogy
  • beyond retribution and future deterrence,
    criminal adjudication can play a symbolic
    function
  • problem besides distortion, is the trial the
    best way to teach
  • Rebecca West citadel of boredom
  • reinforcing or creating communal norms
  • what were the norms created at Nuremberg, and
    what were their prospective effect?

27
three critiques
  • 1) retroactivity
  • 2) politicization
  • 3) selectivity
  • empathy in spite of faults, were results more
    civilized than a program of organized violence
    against prisoners? (Herbert Wechsler, famous
    Columbia law professor)

28
retroactivity
  • Jackson says the point of the trial is about law
  • Chief Justice high class lynching party
  • but thanks to Nuremberg, the worry about legality
    subsequently relaxed
  • Once established, the Nuremberg tribunal and its
    ideas no longer could be viewed as unprecedented.
    Yet the precise precedent established includes
    application to conduct committed before the clear
    statement of laws, in sharp contrast with basic
    notions of the rule of law (Martha Minow)
  • response would these norms have been legalized
    any other way?

29
Judith Shklar
  • Legalism (1964) on Nuremberg trials
  • of course liberal idea of living according to
    rules and principles is a myth
  • but perhaps it is a beneficent one or noble lie
  • for this perspective, the point is not that the
    rule of law is ever (much less always) followed,
    as that political actors have to pretend to do so

30
Cold War politics
  • John McCloy, American zone
  • revision of zonal sentences
  • last war criminal tried in American zone still
    held released in 1958 as part of amnesty and
    parole
  • Later perception de-Nazification superficial
  • Eichmann trial (1961), Frankfurt Auschwitz trial,
    Düsseldorf Treblinka trial (early 1960s)

31
selectivity
  • only individuals, not the nation
  • only certain kinds of war crimes
  • only those crimes committed after the outbreak of
    the war in 1939
  • only those crimes committed by the Axis powers,
    not the Allies
  • historiographical consequences

32
august 6, 1945
33
august 8, 1945
34
august 9, 1945
35
the Holocaust
  • very largely absent from Nuremberg trials
  • as it was from immediate postwar consciousness
  • not what the trials were about
  • privilege of concentration camps over death camps
    (which were not yet well known)
  • effect on historiography and popular
    understanding
  • key mistake to think that the Holocaust prompted
    1940s humanitarianism and human rights

36
law as a vehicle for false sense of recovery?
  • The Nazi crimes, it seems to me, explode the
    limits of
  • the law and that is precisely what constitutes
    their
  • monstrousness. For these crimes, no punishment
    is
  • severe enough. It may well be essential to hang
    Göring,
  • but it is totally inadequate. That is, this
    guilt, in contrast
  • to all criminal guilt, oversteps and shatters any
    and all
  • legal systemsWe are simply not equipped to deal,
    on
  • a human, political level, with a guilt that is
    beyond crime. (Hannah Arendt)

37
long life of Nuremberg
  • 1945 International Military Tribunal at
    Nuremberg
  • 1946 -- UN General Assembly resolution adopting
    the principles of international law recognized
    by the Charter of the Nuremberg Trial.
  • 1948 Genocide Convention develops definition
    of crimes against humanity contemplated creation
    of a permanent international penal tribunalthis
    was blocked by onslaught of the Cold War
  • 1949 Four Geneva Conventions expand on the
    definition of war crimes
  • 1950 Nuremberg Principles adopted by UN
  • 19932005- Security Council passes a resolution
    establishing the ICTY (International Criminal
    Tribunal of Yugoslavia). Main innovation crimes
    against humanity can be tried regardless of
    whether they were committed in an international
    or internal armed conflict no nexus between war
    crimes and crimes against humanity required.
  • 1994 ICTR nexus required entirely omitted
    from ICTR statute
  • 1998 Pinochet heads of state do not have
    immunity
  • 2002 Rome Statute creating the International
    Criminal Court
  • 2005 Supreme Iraqi Criminal Tribunal ?

38
extra-governmental use of war crimes tribunals
  • Russell Tribunal of 1967 -- Stated Aims of the
    Tribunal
  • German Green Party war crimes tribunals at
    Nuremberg in early 1980s
  • World Tribunal on Iraq of 2005 -- Ends and Means
    of the Tribunal BCC
  • Arundhati Roy, Spokesperson of the Jury of
    Conscience International law grounds the
    political and moral demand for the criminal
    indictment and prosecution of those responsible
    for the Iraq War
  • The legitimacy of the World Tribunal on Iraq is
    located in the collective conscience of humanity

39
conclusion is Nurembergs importance a myth?
  • certainly a widely recognized event in its time
  • but -- like UNDHR -- had to be retrieved later
  • It is hard not to notice the enormous gap in
    time between the Nuremberg trials and any
    comparable effort to prosecute war times in
    international settings. The intervening forty
    years included many atrocities, and this fact
    undermines claims that the Nuremberg trials
    deterred mass violence (Martha Minow).
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