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Millions of people were persecuted and murdered by the Nazis. After the war, the Federal Compensation Act was drawn up to set out who was entitled to compensation. But this law was based on a narrow definition of who qualified as a victim of persecution. People who had been persecuted as “anti-social elements” were not included. Their suffering was not officially acknowledged by the German parliament until 2020.
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2026 Penn State Global Asias Summer Institute VITALIZING GLOBAL ASIAS: ARTIFACTS & ARCHIVES Penn State University and the Global Asias Initiative invites applicants for its annual Global Asias Summer Institute.
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Patients have been left blindsided by Monash IVF's decision to temporarily halt treatments using donated eggs and sperm in New South Wales.
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In this interview, Peltier discusses his time in (and release from) prison, his ongoing struggle for Indigenous rights, and more.
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Increase in violence since 2019 is linked to online campaigns seeking to sow disinformation and fuel hatred
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How can we archive against genocide in Gaza and its extension elsewhere in Palestine and surrounding countries like Lebanon in this urgent moment while avoiding the pitfalls of white guilt and paternalistic benevolence?
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A century after the Chinese Exclusion Act introduced its requirement for mass registration, the records created in this hostile context are being used to pursue collective healing, grounded in the personal, painful work of recovering ancestors who lived through the shame and regret of exclusion in silence.
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Arson attacks during protests in Nepal destroyed buildings, court files and even records of international agreements and state investments.
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Career experts warn of decades of progress lost as administration fires staff, slashes budgets and buries data
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Influential Italian economist calls for "radical simplification" of GDPR on the one-year anniversary of his landmark report on European competitiveness
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War crime investigators at Yale discovered a program of re-education and military and police training that was larger than estimated earlier.
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War crime investigators at Yale discovered a program of re-education and military and police training that was larger than estimated earlier.
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The LGBTQ+ History Association is pleased to announce a call for papers for its fourth conference, the Queer/Trans History Conference* 2026 (#QTHC26), to be held at the University of Michigan.
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La loi sur l’accès à l’information varie d’une province à l’autre. Des gouvernements ou des organismes peuvent rendre publiques ou pas certaines informations.
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The Syria Prisons Museum will provide an immersive experience paying homage to victims and survivors of the Assads’ brutal prison system.
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Ruth Weiss, a Jewish journalist, author and human rights activist, was a tireless opponent of apartheid who used her pen to fight hatred and racism. A look at her extraordinary life.
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Seaming together many different records of the civil war in the early 1990s we see a country’s fracture unfold through a crowd of partisan views
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Revelation relating to then Northern Ireland home affairs correspondent, Vincent Kearney, a ‘matter of grave concern’
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A UN special rapporteur shares the stories of those trying to record the horrors of Gaza even as they live through them
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Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania have been scouring the university's Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology to create a visual archive of Iraq's Yazidi communities from photos left behind.
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