2010
DOI: 10.18352/bmgn-lchr.7123
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Imperialism, Colonialism and Genocide. The Dutch Case for an International History of the Holocaust

Abstract: During the past three decades, the historiography of the persecution of the Jews in the Netherlands has been dominated by attempts to resolve ‘the Dutch paradox’: the contrast between the tolerant reputation of the Netherlands on the one hand, and the large numbers of Dutch Jews that perished on the other. Attempts to resolve this paradox often look for specifically Dutch characteristics, thereby neglecting factors of an international nature that had a particular impact in the Netherlands. Attention is devoted… Show more

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“…According to historians, the combination of Dutch bureaucracy with a rather advanced railroad network, and specific geopolitical circumstances at the end of the war was one of the main causes of the mass extermination of Jewish people living in the Netherlands (see Croes 2006;de Haan 2010).…”
Section: Pillarization and The Racialization Of Religious Affiliationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to historians, the combination of Dutch bureaucracy with a rather advanced railroad network, and specific geopolitical circumstances at the end of the war was one of the main causes of the mass extermination of Jewish people living in the Netherlands (see Croes 2006;de Haan 2010).…”
Section: Pillarization and The Racialization Of Religious Affiliationmentioning
confidence: 99%