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40 Int'l J. Legal Info. 599 (2012)
Book Reviews

handle is hein.journals/ijli40 and id is 617 raw text is: BOOK REVIEWS

The Nuremberg Military Tribunals and the Origins of International
Criminal Law. By Kevin Jon Heller. Oxford; New York: Oxford University
Press, 2011. Pp. xviii, 509. ISBN: 978-0-19-955431-7. US$135.00.
After Germany's surrender near the end of World War II, the Allies
prosecuted some of the high-profile perpetrators of Nazi war crimes and
crimes against humanity. The most well known of these trials was the trial
prosecuted by Justice Robert Jackson before the International Military
Tribunal (IMT). After the IMT trial, the Allies agreed that each Ally would
prosecute alleged criminals within their zone of occupation. The United States
then established the Nuremberg Military Tribunals (NMTs) to prosecute Nazi
defendants in the American zone. This book is a comprehensive legal account
of the NMTs' history, proceedings, and influence on the development of
international criminal law.
The author, Jon Heller, considers the NMTs to have had three primary
purposes: to bring Nazi war criminals to justice; to fully document the
atrocities committed by the German government, military, and industrialists;
and to persuade the German people of the terrible reality of those atrocities.
Heller concludes, with ample support, that the tribunals were partially
successful at obtaining justice, very successful at documenting Nazi crimes,
but a complete failure at convincing the occupied German people.
This book is a work of both law and history, but the focus is on the
law. Heller thoroughly reviews the events and decisions leading up to the
creation of the NMTs, and primary documents are heavily cited throughout
the text. However, Heller generally chooses to recite only facts that are
needed to discuss questions of law that faced the tribunals (chapter 4 provides
a brief summary of each of the twelve trials). Thus, the book does not provide
a detailed narrative describing the alleged crimes and courtroom proceedings.
Instead, Heller discusses different genres of legal issues, such as evidence,
elements of war crimes, defenses, and sentencing. He then selects cases that
confronted each legal question and discusses how the tribunals decided
(sometimes reaching divergent results). This organization excels at parsing
out each legal question and filtering out information irrelevant to each
individual question. For readers without deep knowledge of the details of the
Nazi atrocities, a source providing a historical account of the crimes would be
a valuable supplement to Heller's book.
The legal questions the NMTs considered were at times abstract (are
the tribunals American or international courts?) and at others very subjective
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