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crimes committed by totalitarian regimes - Ministrstvo za pravosodje

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Maciej Korkuć<br />

Poland – the victim of two <strong>totalitarian</strong> <strong>regimes</strong> ....................................................................................................... 101<br />

Marius Oprea<br />

The Securitate legacy – terror in Romania .............................................................................................................. 105<br />

Tamás Stark<br />

A topic doomed to oblivion: foreign prisoners in Soviet custody – with special regard to the fate of Hungarian<br />

civilian internees ..................................................................................................................................................... 111<br />

Boris Mlakar<br />

Repression over the Slovenian people <strong>by</strong> the German Nazism ............................................................................. 117<br />

Gorazd Bajc<br />

Crimes <strong>committed</strong> <strong>by</strong> the Fascist regime in the Slovene territory ....................................................................... ... 125<br />

Ljubo Sirc<br />

Totalitarian features of the judiciary in the Republic of Slovenia (1945–90) ........................................................ 135<br />

Milko Mikola<br />

Concentration and labour camps in Slovenia ......................................................................................................... 145<br />

Mitja Ferenc<br />

Secret World War Two mass graves in Slovenia .................................................................................................... 155<br />

Milko Mikola<br />

Communist repression of “interior enemies” in Slovenia ...................................................................................... 161<br />

III. TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE: PROSECUTION AND REDRESS OF INJUSTICE ............................. 173<br />

Lauri Mälksoo<br />

Reparation and reconciliation in international law: the view of an Estonian lawyer ............................................ . 175<br />

Dariusz Gabriel<br />

Prosecution of Nazi and Communist <strong>crimes</strong> in Poland .......................................................................................... 177<br />

Ekaterina Salkova<br />

On rehabilitation and remedy measures in Bulgaria for persons repressed from 1944 through 1989 ................... 185<br />

Carlos Closa<br />

Transitional justice in Spain ................................................................................................................................... 191<br />

Jože Dežman<br />

Communist repression and transitional justice in Slovenia ................................................................................... 197<br />

Pavel Jamnik<br />

Post-World War Two <strong>crimes</strong> on the territory of Slovenia: police investigation and proof regarding criminal offences<br />

that do not fall under the statute of limitations ....................................................................................................... 207<br />

Marius Oprea<br />

About ideologies, institutions and death ................................................................................................................ 215

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