"Even in Auschwitz...Humanity Could Prevail": British POWs and Jewish Concentration-Camp Inmates at IG Auschwitz, 1943-1945
In: Holocaust and genocide studies, Band 15, Heft 2, S. 266-295
ISSN: 1476-7937
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In: Holocaust and genocide studies, Band 15, Heft 2, S. 266-295
ISSN: 1476-7937
In: Border crossing: international journal of social sciences and humanities, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 175-188
ISSN: 2046-4444
Josef Lainck, a German national emigrated to Canada in July 1927. He arrived in Quebec City and travelled west to Edmonton, Alberta where he became a burglar and shot a police officer. Lainck was arrested in November 1927 and deported to Germany in 1938, upon arrival he was arrested and interned in the Sachsenhausen concentration camp until April 1945. This article will examine Lainck's emigration to Canada, arrest and deportation to Nazi Germany. Lainck's case is illuminating as it reveals information on deportations from Canada and the Third Reich's return migration program and how undesirables were treated within Germany. The Third Reich's return migration plan encouraged returnees to seek their deportations as a method of return. Canadian extradition procedures cared little for the fate of foreign nationals expatriated to the country of their birth regardless of the form of government or the turmoil that plagued the nation. This work will compare Canadian to American deportation rates as an illustration of Canada's harsh deportation criterion. In this article, the policies and practices of immigration and deportation are discussed within a framework of insecurity as a key driver for human mobility in the first half of the 20th century.
In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/umn.31951d03595474g
"Classification cancelled by authority of The Joint Chiefs of Staff, by Col. E.W. Gruhn"--P. 1. ; "Enclosure." ; "14 May 1945"--P. 4. ; Evaluation Report 111. 18 June 1945-- page 1. ; File number 60039. ; "Note: the Publication Board, in approving and disseminating this report, hopes that it will be of direct benefit to U.S. science and industry. Interested parties should realize that some products and processes described may also be the subject of U.S. patents. Accordingly, it is recommended that the usual patent study be made before pursuing practical applications." ; "This report has been declassified and released to the Office of Publication Board by the War and Navy Departments." ; "Combined Intelligence Objectives Sub-Committee"--P. 1. ; At head of title: Office of the Publication Board, Department of Commerce. ; Reproduced from typewritten copy. ; Cover title. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: La revue Christus
"Cet ouvrage regroupe quatre textes (dont un inédit) écrits entre 1945 et 1946. L'auteur, résistant, jeune jésuite, a vécu un an, de 1944 à 1945, dans le camp de concentration de Dachau. Écrits par nécessité de témoigner et souci de vérité, ces textes n'hésitent pas à aborder des thèmes aussi difficiles que les conditions de vie des prisonniers, les conflits politiques qui surgissaient entre eux ou la paradoxale liberté que l'on pouvait éprouver dans le camp. Il en tire une grande leçon d'humanité: "Quoi d'autre nous importe, après tout, que de mieux connaître en l'homme ce qui le rend assez maître de son destin pour dominer ainsi et la mort et la vie : cela seul intéresse, à travers les contemporains de Dachau, l'homme de tous les temps"--Page 4 of cover
In: Mémoires du XXe siècle
In: Série Deuxième Guerre mondiale
In: Index on censorship, Band 26, Heft 5, S. 116-116
ISSN: 1746-6067
In: Rossiĭskai︠a︡ biblioteka Kholokosta
In: The prison journal: the official publication of the Pennsylvania Prison Society, Band 73, Heft 3, S. 307-318
ISSN: 1552-7522
Correction professionals have a responsibility and unique opportunity to restructure programs/policies to assist with meeting current incarceration needs. Boot camps were originally designed to (a) reduce prison overcrowding, (b) decrease rates of recidivism, (c) keep the younger offenders away from the chronic prison population, (d) reduce the cost of incarceration, (e) provide a general deterrence, (f) provide enhanced discipline, and (g) rehabilitate offenders. To date, researchers have yet to closely examine the program, services, and incarceration of boot camps from an inmate's perspective. The subsequent case histories were documented as part of an ongoing program evaluation and quality assurance activity conducted at the Massachusetts Boot Camp.
In: Beck'sche Reihe 1998