Law

Philipp C. Mohr

Kein Recht zur Einmischung?

Die politische und völkerrechtliche Reaktion Grossbritanniens auf Hitlers 'Machtergreifung' und die einsetzende Judenverfolgung

[»No Right to Interfere«. The Role of Politics and International Law in Great Britain's Reaction to Hitler's Seizure of Power and the Beginning Persecution of the Jews. By Philipp Caspar Mohr.]

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Published in German.
1933 and 1934 were critical years for the reaction of Great Britain to Hitler's seizure of power. In this work, the author demonstrates how the most influential European power and guarantor of the Treaties of Versailles and Locarno replied to the Nazi threat in the heart of Europe. What role did international law play in the response to the swift abolition of democracy and the persecution of Germany's Jews? This study provides fascinating insights into how the international community reacted to Germany's discrimination of Jews in the early years of the Third Reich. Philipp Mohr analyzes a wide array of unpublished documents from the British cabinet, the Foreign Office, the German Auswärtiges Amt, and private papers as well as the discussions held by the British parliament and the opinions of the British press in order to ascertain the British state of mind regarding the emerging Nazi dictatorship. The author also describes the discussions of the Council of the League of Nations in regard to the discrimination of the Jews in Germany.
1933 and 1934 were critical years for the reaction of Great Britain to Hitler's seizure of power. In this work, the author demonstrates how the most influential European power and guarantor of the Treaties of Versailles and Locarno replied to the Nazi threat in the heart of Europe. What role did international law play in the response to the swift abolition of democracy and the persecution of Germany's Jews? This study provides fascinating insights into how the international community reacted to Germany's discrimination of Jews in the early years of the Third Reich. Philipp Mohr analyzes a wide array of unpublished documents from the British cabinet, the Foreign Office, the German Auswärtiges Amt, and private papers as well as the discussions held by the British parliament and the opinions of the British press in order to ascertain the British state of mind regarding the emerging Nazi dictatorship. The author also describes the discussions of the Council of the League of Nations in regard to the discrimination of the Jews in Germany.
Authors/Editors

Philipp C. Mohr Geboren 1967; 1988–90 Studium der Rechtswissenschaften und Geschichte; 1990–91 Master of Philosophy in International Relations in Cambridge; 1994–97 Wiss. Mitarbeiter am Institut für Internationale Angelegenheiten in Hamburg; 1996 Research Fellow an der Universität Stellenbosch, Südafrika; 1997 zweites jur. Staatsexamen; 2000 Promotion; 1998–2001 Investment Banker bei J. P. Morgan in London; seit April 2001 bei Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein in Frankfurt/Main.

Reviews

The following reviews are known:

In: Neue Juristische Wochenschrift — 2003, H.23, S. 1650 (Dr.Otto Gritschneder)
In: Historische Zeitschrift — Bd.276 (2003), S. 513ff (Konrad Fuchs)
In: FAZ — 5.November 2002, Nr.257, S. 8 (Gottfried Niedhart)
In: Zeitschr.f.Neuere Rechtsgeschichte — Jg.25 (2003), H.3/4, S. 343ff (Stefan Kadelbach)
In: Rechtsgeschichte — 2003, H.3, S. 206ff (Stefanie Steinle)