Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- Canada (2)
- Indigenous (2)
- 1845 (1)
- 2 (1)
- 2001 Financial Crisis (1)
-
- Adelaide Peninsula (1)
- Adrian Schimnowski (1)
- American Geographical Society (1)
- Arbitration (1)
- Archaeological (1)
- Archaeology (1)
- Arctic (1)
- Arctic Research Foundaiton (1)
- Argentina (1)
- Article XII (1)
- Assets (1)
- Assignment (1)
- Authoritarianism (1)
- Award (1)
- BIT (1)
- Banking (1)
- Bankruptcy (1)
- Bilateral investment treaty (1)
- Bolivarian Revolution (1)
- British-American-German Relations (1)
- CPUCH (1)
- Canada-Venezuela BIT (1)
- Canadian Federal Law (1)
- Carlos Andres Perez (1)
- Cathy Towtongie (1)
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in History
Film Review: Operation Finale, Melanie O'Brien
Film Review: Operation Finale, Melanie O'Brien
Genocide Studies and Prevention: An International Journal
In 1960, the Israeli intelligence agency, Mossad, undertook an operation in Argentina to capture the architect of the Final Solution, Adolf Eichmann, and bring him to Israel to stand trial. Operation Finale [Chris Weitz, 2018] tells the story of this intelligence operation: the actions of and challenges for the agents involved, in a way that captures the banality of Eichmann’s personality before it was put on show for the world to see in his televised trial. Operation Finale is available on Netflix, rendering it a Holocaust film with an extraordinarily large reach.
Casualties Of War? Refining The Civilian-Military Dichotomy In World War I, Eric Grube
Casualties Of War? Refining The Civilian-Military Dichotomy In World War I, Eric Grube
Madison Historical Review
Throughout the First World War, newspapers around the world mocked the British state for its lavish spending on captured German officers kept at Donington Hall, a refurbished English estate. Why was this camp such a controversial space of perceived decadence? I argue that its comforts seemed to linger from an earlier era, one in which military men exuded genteel civility as integral to their supposedly heroic service. The British state essentially enabled such treatment, and the public decried this space for sustaining the anachronism of aristocratic privilege in the face of a globalized total war. However, the German inmates expected …
How Two Sunken Ships Caused A War: The Legal And Cultural Battle Between Great Britain, Canada, And The Inuit Over The Franklin Expedition Shipwrecks, Christina Labarge
How Two Sunken Ships Caused A War: The Legal And Cultural Battle Between Great Britain, Canada, And The Inuit Over The Franklin Expedition Shipwrecks, Christina Labarge
Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review
No abstract provided.
Venezuela Undermines Gold Miner Crystallex's Attempts To Recover On Its Icsid Award, Sam Wesson
Venezuela Undermines Gold Miner Crystallex's Attempts To Recover On Its Icsid Award, Sam Wesson
Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review
No abstract provided.