Genocide in Yugoslavia
Pt. 1 (pp. 15-134), "Genocide - an International Crime", presents a history of genocide from antiquity to the present and a history of the development of the judicial notion of genocide, and surveys socio-psychological and philosophical theories of genocide. Pt. 2 (pp. 137-438), "Genocide of the Serbs, Jews and Gypsies in Yugoslavia", focuses on the extermination of Serbs in the German-, Bulgarian- and Hungarian-occupied areas of Yugoslavia, especially in the puppet state of Croatia in 1941-44, but mentions also the genocide of Jews. Pp. 331-342, "The System of Concentration Camps", deal with Jasenovac and other concentration camps in Yugoslavia. Concentrates, essentially, on the perpetrators of genocide; contends that the guilt must be placed not only on Germany but also on Croatia and other forces.
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Contents
INTRODUCTION
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1 |
GENOCIDE DOWN THROUGH HISTORY
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17 |
Twentieth Century
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28 |
Copyright
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Common terms and phrases
according acts Albania Allied April army Article atrocities authorities AVII Axis powers Balkans Belgrade Bosnia and Hercegovina British Bulgarian carried Catholic Church Četniks civil civilian Comintern commander concentration camps Convention crimes committed criminal Croatia Croatian Peasant Party Croats cultural delegate Draža Mihailović enemy Europe extermination fascism forces gendarmerie genocide German Gospić Gypsies Hitler Home Guard human Hungarian Hungary Ibid ideology Independent individual international law Italian Italy Jewish Jews Josip Broz killed Kingdom of Yugoslavia Kosovo and Metohija Kvaternik large number Maček mass murders massacres military Minister Ministry Montenegrins moral Muslims Mussolini Nazi occupied officers organization Orthodox Church Partisans Pavelić persons Poglavnik political priests Priština problem propaganda protection punishment regarded religious representatives responsibility sent Serbian population Serbophobia Serbs Shqiptars social Soviet Starčević Stepinac territory terror took tribunal troops United Ustaša Ustaša movement Vatican victims village Yugoslav government Yugoslavia Zagreb