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- Krieger, Heinrich - Encyclopedia of Arkansas
Heinrich Karl Krieger was a German lawyer instrumental in providing knowledge of American race law to Nazi policy-makers As an exchange student at the University of Arkansas School of Law in Fayetteville (Washington County) in 1933–34, he engaged in an in-depth examination of American Indian Law
- The Principles of Indian Law Inspired the Nazis
What Krieger admired most about Lincoln was his plan to remove all blacks to an island in the Caribbean Removing blacks and Indians was also the idea of Thomas Jefferson
- The University of Arkansass hidden history of helping Nazis
Not much is known about Heinrich Krieger He was a German lawyer who attended the University of Arkansas in 1933 and 1934 to study business and American race law — particularly laws regarding Indigenous Americans
- Nazi Germany and American Indians - ICT News
A review of Heinrich Krieger’s career adds significantly to the thesis that Nazi scholars and officials were heavily influenced by United States Indian law Krieger was a crucial actor in the process of Nazis studying and adopting American racial policies and Indian laws
- Interview: James Whitman How Jim Crow Inspired the Nazis
In 1935, 45 Nazi lawyers came to America on a “study trip ” One man in particular was instrumental in collecting knowledge about American race law In 1933-34, Heinrich Krieger was an exchange student at the University of Arkansas Law School
- Heinrich Krieger and the Nazi Vision of the United States
This thesis will study the development of Krieger while a student in Arkansas to reveal how Krieger and the Nazi party had no master plan to use the US and its race laws as a model for the Nuremberg laws
- Book traces Nazi law roots to, among others, Arkansas
Especially significant were the writings of the German lawyer Heinrich Krieger, “the single most important figure in the Nazi assimilation of American race law,” who spent the 1933–34 academic
- Race Law in the United States (1934) - Heinrich Krieger - 1Library
Krieger addressed legal limits various states placed on the rights of Black Americans, primarily
- Heinrich Krieger - FasciPedia
Krieger’s account of American anti-miscegenation laws seems to have been of particular interest to Nazi lawyers, and it was probably influential on the Blood Law promulgated at Nuremberg in 1935
- What America Taught the Nazis in the 1930s - The Atlantic
Especially significant were the writings of the German lawyer Heinrich Krieger, “the single most important figure in the Nazi assimilation of American race law,” who spent the 1933–34 academic
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