Description
About the Author
Derk Venema is assistant professor at the Law Faculty of the Open University in the Netherlands. He has published on the Dutch judiciary in WWII and transitional justice theory, amongst other subjects. He teaches professional ethics at the Training Centre for the Judiciary SSR, and is an associated researcher at CegeSoma, Brussels. Melanie Bost holds a PhD in contemporary history and is an associated researcher at CegeSoma and the Royal Military Academy (Brussels). Her research focuses on the exercise of justice during the two world wars, daily life in occupied Belgium in 1914-1918 and military intelligence. Martin Loehnig was Chair for Civil Law, Legal History and Canon Law at the University of Konstanz (2005-2008) and is now Chair for Civil Law, Legal History and Canon Law at the University of Regensburg. His research concerns Family Law, Succession Law, Comparative/European Legal History, and Legal Culture. Ditlev Tamm is a professor emeritus at the Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen. As a lawyer and historian he has published books on Danish and European legal history, political history, and cultural history including literature and ballet. In 1984 he published a book on the role of Danish Courts during WWII and post-war transitionary justice. Clement Millon is a historian and jurist, and holds a PhD in law from the University of Lille and Frankfurt-am-Main. He is affiliated to the Catholic University of the Vendee (ICES). Marc Olivier Baruch was formerly a civil servant in the French Ministries of Education and Culture and in the Prime Minister's office; since 2003 he has been directeur d'etudes at the Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales. He researches the political history of the civil service in contemporary France. Hans Petter Graver is a professor of private law affiliated with University of Oslo; his research concerns public law and legal theory. He is the author of Judges against Justice. On Judges when the Rule of Law is under Attack(2015) and Der Krieg der Richter. Die deutsche Besatzung 1940-1945 und der norwegische Rechtsstaat (2019). Francoise Muller holds a PhD in contemporary history. She wrote her doctoral thesis on the history of the Belgian Court of Cassation, from the perspective of the relations between the different constitutional powers. She is postdoctoral researcher at Universite Catholique de Louvain. She is also Bachelor of Law and Bachelor of Political Science. Kirsten Peters studied history at the Universite Libre de Bruxelles and Tourism at the Institut Roger Lambion. As a research assistant at the Universite Saint Louis, she researched Belgian judges and lawyers under German occupation (1940-1944). She now works with the Permanent Representation of Germany to the EU. Jaromir Tauchen is associate professor at the Department of History of State and Law of the Faculty of Law, Masaryk University Brno. He researches German legal history, especially the Third Reich, and the history of Germans in the Czech lands. His publications include Labour and its Legal Regulation in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia (1939-1945) (2016). Vincent Artuso is a historian specialised in the history of collaboration in occupied countries during WWII. He is currently working as a research fellow at the Centre for Contemporary and Digital History of the University of Luxembourg. Antonio Grilli is a professor of legal history at the Open University of Como/Rome, having previously served as an EC Lawyer in Brussels (2000-2018). He has published widely on justice during Fascism, including Between Revolt and Collaboration: Judges in Occupied Italy (1943-1945) (2017). He is currently writing a book on Mussolini's special tribunal for the State defence.
Book Information
ISBN 9789463720496
Author Derk Venema
Format Hardback
Page Count 340
Imprint Amsterdam University Press
Publisher Amsterdam University Press