The Nuremburg Precedence
Title: The Nuremburg Precedence
Category: Literature / English
Details: Words: 2748 | Pages: 11.7 (approximately 235 words/page)
The Nuremburg Precedence
The Nuremburg Precedence
History… will judge these trials wholly by whether the victors themselves adhere to the standards and the law they impose on the vanquished. In judging the vanquished, the victors also judge themselves. (New York Times editorial, May 14, 1946, quoted in Piccigallo, 1979, p. 18).
Although they were not without precedent, the Allied trials of war criminals at Nuremberg and elsewhere represented new legal principles and extensions of existing legal principles in an attempt to create
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showed last 75 words of 2748 total
Tribunal in Arusha for the Rwandan Massacres are the only modern examples to follow the Nuremberg precedent, the fact they and others elsewhere exist or will be formed, show that the Nuremberg precedents are indeed taking root in international law. While there are many interesting points of international law that remain in contention, the Allied war crimes trials “contributed substantially” toward “the absolute necessity of establishing an international order aimed at deterring war” (Piccigallo, 1979, p. 211).
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