Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2238101008> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 64 of
64
with 100 items per page.
- W2238101008 endingPage "158" @default.
- W2238101008 startingPage "154" @default.
- W2238101008 abstract "Author: O. ZHELEZNIAK, A. PARKHOMENKO ... Бондаренко Е. Ю. Иностранные военнопленные на Дальнем Востоке России (114-156 гг.) ... Бондаренко Е. Ю. Иностранные военнопленные на Дальнем Востоке России (114-156 гг.) (Bondarenko, Ye. Yu. Foreign Prisoners-of-War in the Russian Far East [114-156]). Vladivostok: Far Eastern University Press, 2002, 228 pp. ... The readers of Far Eastern Affairs very familiar with the author of this monograph from several articles she wrote in the 10s on Japanese prisoners- of-war in the Far East (The Long Road Home from Captivity, Harsh Russian Captivity, and so on). During these years, Ms. Bondarenko gradually extended her research studies and began publishing articles in Russia and the APR on the prisoners-of-war of other nationalities who ended up in camps in the Far East. These long years of research became part of the monograph under review. ... The past 20th century went down in human history not only for the tens of millions of victims in the two World Wars and multitude of local conflicts, but also for its comparable figures regarding prisoners-of-war. During the years of World War I, the latter amounted to more than 10 million people, and after World War II this number increased to 35 million. Since the end of this war, more than 150 local wars and armed conflicts have taken the lives of 20 million people. Correspondingly, the number of prisoners-of-war was just as high. As the recent U. S. and British operation in Iraq showed, the prisoner-of-war is still urgent. The question of prisoners-of-war and their legal protection is still very much on the agenda. In so doing, it is extremely beneficial and important to look at the in retrospect. ... This monograph consists of four chapters, but its very extensive introduction is just as interesting. It sets forth the biography and historiography of this problem, which no one has analyzed until now (pp. 15-35). A number of authors have covered this topic, but Ms. Bondarenko is the first to look at the in its individual manifestations as a whole and primarily makes use of archive documents that became available at the end of the 180s. This made it possible to reveal the truth about such important aspects as the forced of prisoners-of-war, their everyday living conditions, and the political brainwashing Japanese prisoners were subjected to in Soviet camps. ... The author presents her evaluation of several archive depositories that could be of interest to researchers. She also reviews foreign publications on the prisoners-of-war problem. She notes that numerous articles, more than two thousand ... Pages. 154 ... memoirs of former prisoners-of-war, and an eight-volume anthology have been published in Japan. All of them, which deserve attention to one extent or another, are not based on documental facts and in most cases subjective in nature, full of everyday details and descriptions of the workday. ... The first chapter of this study takes a look at the problems of foreign prisoners-of-war in the Far East during World War I. ... The second chapter analyzes the role of foreign prisoners-of-war as the situation developed in the Russia's Far East during the years of foreign intervention and the civil war of 118-122. ... The monograph primarily focuses on the topic of Japanese prisoners-of-war held in camps in the Russian Far East between September 145 and December 156. The next two chapters of the monograph devoted to this subject. These chapters the most pertinent. More than fifty years have passed since the end of World War II, but Russian-Japanese post-war regulation has still not been fully tied up. One of the bones of contention during the Russian-Japanese talks was and still is the of Japanese prisoners-of-war brought into Soviet territory after the Quantong Army was routed. The author notes that some Japanese researchers place it in the same category as the territorial problem (p. 21). The fact that the Soviet Union made prisoners-of-war work, writes the author, was in keeping with the provisions of international law (p. 11). But holding them prisoner for long years in order to use them as cheap violates the provisions of international agreements and cannot be justified. Item 4 of Article of the Potsdam Declaration, writes the author, talks directly about the need for Japanese armed forces personnel to return home as quickly as possible. This requirement also applied to the Soviet Union as a party to this declaration. This provision was observed by other allies. But the Soviet Union delayed repatriation of Japanese prisoners-of-war for more than four years, and so- called military criminals for more than 11 years, subjecting them to forced labor (p. 11). The author maintains that the long years prisoners-of- war were kept in Soviet camps violated the norms of international law (p. 10). ... The Soviet leadership planned to use Japanese prisoners-of-war as cheap even before the war with Japan." @default.
- W2238101008 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2238101008 creator A5019872700 @default.
- W2238101008 creator A5054257782 @default.
- W2238101008 date "2003-06-30" @default.
- W2238101008 modified "2023-09-26" @default.
- W2238101008 title "BONDARENKO, YE. YU. FOREIGN PRISONERS-OF-WAR IN THE RUSSIAN FAR EAST [114-156]" @default.
- W2238101008 hasPublicationYear "2003" @default.
- W2238101008 type Work @default.
- W2238101008 sameAs 2238101008 @default.
- W2238101008 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W2238101008 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2238101008 hasAuthorship W2238101008A5019872700 @default.
- W2238101008 hasAuthorship W2238101008A5054257782 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConcept C137355542 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConcept C151719136 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConcept C195244886 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConcept C2780565519 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConcept C3018496412 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConcept C6303427 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConcept C81631423 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConceptScore W2238101008C137355542 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConceptScore W2238101008C151719136 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConceptScore W2238101008C17744445 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConceptScore W2238101008C195244886 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConceptScore W2238101008C199539241 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConceptScore W2238101008C2780565519 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConceptScore W2238101008C3018496412 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConceptScore W2238101008C6303427 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConceptScore W2238101008C81631423 @default.
- W2238101008 hasConceptScore W2238101008C95457728 @default.
- W2238101008 hasIssue "002" @default.
- W2238101008 hasLocation W22381010081 @default.
- W2238101008 hasOpenAccess W2238101008 @default.
- W2238101008 hasPrimaryLocation W22381010081 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W1514673962 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W1550677296 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W1554471569 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W1936486300 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W2033414605 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W2040275649 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W2058889303 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W2065632835 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W2172427496 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W2270396517 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W2483489625 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W2488826230 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W2794185207 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W2888104562 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W3174895095 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W3196266967 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W569346530 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W581335701 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W873893549 @default.
- W2238101008 hasRelatedWork W2613781939 @default.
- W2238101008 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2238101008 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2238101008 magId "2238101008" @default.
- W2238101008 workType "article" @default.