Yad Vashem Studies is an academic journal featuring articles on the cutting edge of research and reflection on the Holocaust. Yad Vashem Studies is a must for any serious library seeking to offer the essential texts on the Nazi era and the Holocaust. “Yad Vashem Studies has been at the forefront of research into the Nazi persecution and mass murder of the Jews, its origins and its consequences… indispensable for researchers and teachers alike. No library that purports to offer students and teachers the essential historical texts on the Nazi era and the fate of the Jews can afford to be without Yad Vashem Studies.” [David Cesarani, The Journal of Holocaust Education] Beginning with volume 35, Yad Vashem Studies comes out twice annually, in spring and fall, making our contributors’ important research available to our readers more quickly and more readily. We have also redone our layout in order to make it more reader friendly. Our rigorous high standards remain unchanged.
Table of Contents: Introduction; In Memoriam: Jacob Robinson (1889-1977). Table of Contents: Trends in Holocaust Research (Yehuda Bauer) Referat Deutschland, Jewish Policy and the German Foreign Office 1933-1940 (Christopher R. Browning) The Reaction of the Jewish Public in Germany to the Nuremberg Laws (Abraham Margaliot) The Diplomatic Negotiations over the Transfer of Jewish Children from Croatia to Turkey and Palestine in 1943 (Daniel Carpi) The Treatment of Hungarian Jews in German-Occupied Europe (Randolph L. Braham) Deep-Rooted yet Alien: Some Aspects of the History of the Jews in Subcarpathian Ruthenia (Livia Rothkirchen) Relations between Poland and Germany and Their Impact on the Jewish Problem in Poland 1935-1938 (Emanuel Melzer) Jews in General Anders’ Army in the Soviet Union (Yisrael Gutman) The Fate of Jewish Prisoners of War in the September 1939 Campaign (Shmuel Krakowski) Jewish Leadership in Occupied Poland - Postures and Attitudes - The Third International Historical Conference, Yad Vashem Publications 1975-1977 (Aharon Weiss)