- Leila Nadya Sadat, Judgment at Nuremberg: Foreword to the Symposium
- KEYNOTE ADDRESS
- ARTICLES
- John Q. Barrett, The Nuremberg Roles of Justice Robert H. Jackson
- Roger S. Clark, Nuremberg and the Crime Against Peace
- Benjamin B. Ferencz, Enabling the International Criminal Court to Punish Aggression
- Thomas Franck, Individual Criminal Liability and Collective Civil Responsibility: Do They Reinforce or Contradict One Another?
- Hans-Peter Kaul, The International Criminal Court: Current Challenges and Perspectives
- Steven R. Ratner, Can We Compare Evils? The Enduring Debate on Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity
- David Rodin, The Liability of Ordinary Soldiers for Crimes of Aggression
- Nancy Sherman, From Nuremberg to Guantánamo: Medical Ethics Then and Now
- Patricia M. Wald, Genocide and Crimes Against Humanity
- Michael Walzer, The Crime of Aggressive War
- REMARKS
- Christopher J. Dodd, Nuremberg: Past, Present and Future
- Henry T. King, Jr., Without Nuremberg - What?
- Benjamin B. Ferencz, A World of Peace Under the Rule of Law: The View From America
- Christoph J.M. Safferling, A World of Peace Under the Rules of Law: The View From Europe
- EPILOGUE
Thursday, December 20, 2007
Symposium: Judgment at Nuremberg
The latest issue of the Washington University Global Studies Law Review (Vol. 6, no. 3, 2007) contains the proceedings of the symposium "Judgment at Nuremberg," held at the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law, September 30-October 1, 2006. Contents include: