Hitler's Prisons

2004 book by Nikolaus Wachsmann From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hitler's Prisons: Legal Terror in Nazi Germany is a 2004 book by Nikolaus Wachsmann, a modern European history professor. Wachsmann argues that the Nazi judiciary played a key role in Nazi terror. The prison systems inflicted harsh punishments against Jews, homosexuals and Jehovah's Witnesses while enforcing Nazi racial policies.[1] Wachsmann describes how law enforcement promoted the Nazi and terror acts in Germany before and during World War II[2] and each chapter describes a specific topic relating to political prisoner terror. The book illuminates the bureaucratic and institutional history of prisons and the history of inmates themselves.[3][4][5][6][7]

AuthorNikolaus Wachsmann
Publication date
2004
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Hitler's Prisons
AuthorNikolaus Wachsmann
Publication date
2004
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