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Law without Mercy: Japanese Courts-Martial and Military Courts During the Asia-Pacific War, 1937-45

Descripción del proyecto

Estudiar la relación entre el derecho, la guerra y la violencia

Entre 1937 y 1945, el conflicto entre China y Japón estalló en el campo de batalla y en los tribunales. Con jueces y abogados que seguían a los soldados japoneses, el sistema de tribunales militares en todo el este y sureste de Asia reguló la violencia para servir a los objetivos de guerra de Japón. También obligó a los civiles a seguir el nuevo orden japonés en Asia oriental y convenció al público nacional e internacional de que la guerra de Japón era legítima y «legal». En cuanto a los veredictos, estos declaraban habitualmente prisión o ejecución. En este contexto, el equipo del proyecto LawWithoutMercy, financiado con fondos europeos, analizará la violencia masiva durante la guerra del Pacífico. Utilizará la justicia militar como foco de atención y como una lente de gran precisión para estudiar las diversas figuraciones de la violencia durante la guerra.

Objetivo

Japan fought the war over East and Southeast Asia between 1937 and 1945 not only in the theatres of war, but with equal harshness in the courtrooms of military justice. Wherever Japanese soldiers went, judge-advocates followed, meeting out stern justice to soldiers, civilians and enemy soldiers alike. The system of courts-martial and military courts throughout East and Southeast Asia served three purposes: regulate violence and channel it efficiently to serve Japan's war goals; deter the civilian population and coerce it into following Japan's 'New Order' in East Asia; and finally, convince domestic and international audiences that Japan's war was not only legitimate, but also 'legal'. Yet, despite formal pretences, verdicts routinely ended in execution or harsh imprisonment. As such, the violence of the justice system mirrored the brutality of the war in general.
Despite the highly contentious nature of the war even today, a systematic study of mass violence during the Asia-Pacific War has been sorely lacking. 'Law without Mercy' undertakes this daunting task by using military justice as focal point and as a highly precise lens for studying the various figurations of violence during the war. It is pioneering in analysing legal practice as an integral part of this violence and facilitator for its routinisation and escalation on the battlefield and in the occupied territories. And finally, it opens up a wholly new and large body of sources through original archival work that helps to overcome the notorious direness of documentation on Japan's conduct during the war.
Situated at the intersection of several historical fields, 'Law without Mercy' capitalises on the double expertise of the PI in modern Japanese history and international law. With the complex and precarious relation between law, war and violence still at the heart of humanitarian issues, the historical insights of this project have very practical implications for our conflict-laden world today.

Régimen de financiación

ERC-COG - Consolidator Grant

Institución de acogida

FREIE UNIVERSITAET BERLIN
Aportación neta de la UEn
€ 1 697 776,00
Dirección
KAISERSWERTHER STRASSE 16-18
14195 Berlin
Alemania

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Región
Berlin Berlin Berlin
Tipo de actividad
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Enlaces
Coste total
€ 1 697 776,00

Beneficiarios (1)