05001nam 22006615 450 991048373510332120230810172739.03-030-72050-010.1007/978-3-030-72050-6(CKB)4100000011954963(MiAaPQ)EBC6638842(Au-PeEL)EBL6638842(OCoLC)1256239704(DE-He213)978-3-030-72050-6(PPN)258305665(EXLCZ)99410000001195496320210607d2021 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierDoing Justice In Wartime Multiple Interplays between Justice and Populations during the Two World Wars /edited by Mélanie Bost, Antoon Vrints1st ed. 2021.Cham :Springer International Publishing :Imprint: Springer,2021.1 online resource (202 pages)Studies in the History of Law and Justice,2198-9850 ;193-030-72049-7 Introduction -- Juvenile Delinquency, War and the Food Crisis: A Judicial Response to Delinquent Subsistence Strategies (Belgium, 1914–1918) -- Judges, Lawyers, ‘Vultures’ and ‘Butchers’: Actors and Stakes of the Rental Crisis in Occupied Brussels, 1914–1918 -- ‘I swear I am a true patriot!’ Rhetorical Defence Strategies of Suspects during the Prosecution of Denunciation to the Enemy in Belgium in the Wake of the First World War -- Prosecuting Food Profiteers after the Armistice: A Transitional-Justice Wake of the First World War -- Prosecuting Food Profiteers after the Armistice: A Transitional-Justice Perspective, 1919–1923 -- In the Jails of the Fatherland: The Penitentiary Repression of Disloyal Civilians after the First World War in Belgium -- Policing Occupied Countries: Gendarmes and Populations Facing Security Needs (1940–1944, Hainaut/Nord-Pas-de-Calais) -- Maintaining Order in Occupied Belgium? The Brussels Public Prosecutor’s Office and Wartime Political Violence 1940–1950 -- ‘Ich habe noch nie sterben gesehen, wie man in Belgien stirbt’. Military Chaplain Otto Gramann and the Execution of Hostages and Convicts in German-Occupied Belgium and Northern France (1940–1944) -- Foreigners, Penal Justice and Eigensinn in Berlin during the Second World War -- Belgian Judicial Actors and the Establishment of the Punishment of Collaboration with the Enemy in the East Cantons -- After the Big Show: British Police Officers and Civil Affairs in Europe.This book discusses the impact of war on the complex interactions between various actors involved in justice: individuals and social groups on the one hand and ‘the justice system’ (police, judiciary and professionals working in the prison service) on the other. It also highlights the emergence of new expectations of justice among these actors as a result of war. Furthermore, the book addresses justice practices, strategies for coping with the changing circumstances, new forms of negotiation, interactions, relationships between populations and the formal justice system in this specific context, and the long-term effects of this renegotiation. Ten out of the eleven chapters focus on Belgian issues, covering the two world wars in equal measure. Belgium’s diverse war experiences in the twentieth century mean that a study of the country provides fascinating insights into the impact of war on the dynamics of ‘doing justice’. The Belgian army fought in both world wars, and the vast majority of the population experienced military occupation. The latter led to various forms of collaboration with the enemy, which required the newly reinstalled Belgian government to implement large-scale judicial processes to repress these ‘antipatriotic’ behaviours, in order to restore both its authority and legitimacy and to re-establish social peace. .Studies in the History of Law and Justice,2198-9850 ;19LawPhilosophyLawHistoryWorld War, 1939-1945Law and the social sciencesTheories of Law, Philosophy of Law, Legal HistoryLegal HistoryHistory of World War II and the HolocaustSocio-Legal StudiesLawPhilosophy.LawHistory.World War, 1939-1945.Law and the social sciences.Theories of Law, Philosophy of Law, Legal History.Legal History.History of World War II and the Holocaust.Socio-Legal Studies.364.981364.94930904Bost MélanieVrints AntoonMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910483735103321Doing Justice in Wartime1921389UNINA