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Lädt ... Lawyers Without Rights: The Fate of Jewish Lawyers in Berlin after 1933von Simone Lawig-Winters
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Lawyers Without Rights captures the story of the occupational bans on Jewish lawyers and jurists in Berlin, the capital city and home to 3,400 attorneys. Of those, 43 percent were of Jewish origin, the largest group of any city in Germany in 1933. This story was first told in German two decades ago and updated in 2007. The book includes more than 1,600 bios of lawyers in Berlin who could no longer practice law after 1938 because of their Jewish ancestry, and notes the fate of 1,404 of them.With original Forewords by The Honorable Stephen G. Breyer, Associate Justice, U.S. Supreme Court; Benjamin B. Ferencz, sole surviving Nuremberg prosecutor; and philanthropist Ronald Abramson Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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