Skip to content
A Member of the Law Professor Blogs Network

Judgment at Nuremberg Conference 29 September – 1 October 2006 Washington University School of Law

World War II didn’t end on the battlefield, it ended in a Courtroom with twenty-one members of the Nazi high command standing inside Nuremberg’s Palace of Justice and pleading not guilty. At Washington University School of Lawm academics will we rethink the meaning and contemporary relevance of the Nuremberg Judgment. Symposium on international criminal law; commemoration of the trial of major German war criminals at the end of World War II and its impact on international law, the judicial system, world peace and order; special commentary and film documentary. v Crimes Against Humanity, Including Genocide v Offenses Against the Laws and Customs of War v The Crime of Aggressive War v The Prosecution of War Criminals at Nuremberg v Prosecuting International Crimes after Nuremberg v The International Criminal Court – 21st Century v A World of Peace Under the Rule of Law CLE (19.5 credits). Agenda, speakers, registration information available at http://law.wustl.edu/HIGLS/Conferences/nuremberg/

Whitney Harris, U.S. Nuremberg Prosecutor John O. Haley and Leila N. Sadat, Washington University, Law Larry May, Washington University, Philosophy Contact for additional information: Linda McClain, Assistant Director Harris Institute for Global Legal Studies lmcclain@wulaw.wustl.edu or 935.7988

.