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Author Guidelines
Upon receipt of accepted manuscripts at Oxford Journals, authors will be invited to complete an online copyright license to publish form via an online portal, SciPris. Open Access Options. Holocaust and Genocide Studies offers the option of publishing under either a standard licence or an open access licence. Please note that some funders ...
Why Publish with HGS
Why submit to Holocaust and Genocide Studies?. The major forum for scholarship on the Holocaust and other genocides, Holocaust and Genocide Studies (HGS) is an independent, peer-reviewed international journal featuring research articles, analytical essays, and book reviews in the social sciences and humanities. HGS is continually seeking to expand the breadth of fields published in the journal ...
Issues
Holocaust and Genocide Studies | 38 | 3 | November 2024. Cover Photograph. Heinrich Joest, " A destitute Jewish man with his two children on a street in the Warsaw ghetto, " September 19, 1941, Warsaw Poland, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, photograph no. 74029, courtesy of Guen-ther Schwarberg. Heinrich Joest was a German army sergeant during the Second World War who ...
American Antisemitism
The American Christian Palestine Committee, the Holocaust, and Mainstream Protestant Zionism, 1938-1948 Caitlin Carenen Holocaust and Genocide Studies 24, no. 2 (2010): 273-96. Full text. Dissension in the Face of the Holocaust: The 1941 American Debate over Antisemitism Joseph W. Bendersky Holocaust and Genocide Studies 24, no. 1 (2010 ...
The Holocaust in Ukraine
The Holocaust in Ukraine. In 2014, Holocaust and Genocide Studies published a virtual issue on the Holocaust in Ukraine, and in her introduction to it, the historian Wendy Lower began by noting that "Once again Ukraine finds itself in a state of revolution and war.Russian invasion and the internecine struggles of pro-Russian separatists and Ukrainian nationalists threaten Ukraine's ...
Armenian Genocide
The Armenian Genocide: Selected Articles from Holocaust and Genocide Studies. Between the onset of World War I and the founding of the Turkish Republic in 1923 approximately 1.5 million Armenians, or more than half of the Ottoman Empire's Armenian population, died as a result of deportations, starvation, serial massacres, and mass executions.