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James Whitman
Occupation(s)Professor, writer
Relatives Martin J. Whitman (father)
Barbara Whitman (sister)
AwardsGuggenheim Fellow
Academic background
Education Yale University ( BA, JD)
Columbia University ( MA)
University of Chicago ( PhD)
ThesisRule of Roman Law in Romantic Germany, 1790–1860 (1987)
Doctoral advisor Arnaldo Momigliano
Academic work
DisciplineLaw
Sub-disciplineComparative Law, Comparative Legal History
Institutions Stanford University, Yale University
Main interestsLegal history

James Q. Whitman is an American lawyer and Ford Foundation Professor of Comparative and Foreign Law at Yale University. [1]

Biography

Whitman is the son of investor and philanthropist Martin J. Whitman. [2] He also has a sister, Tony Award-winning producer Barbara Whitman. [2] [3]

He graduated from Yale University with a BA in 1980 and a JD in 1988, from Columbia University with a MA in 1982, and from the University of Chicago with a PhD in 1987. He was a Guggenheim Fellow. [4] [5] In 2015, he was awarded a doctorate honoris causa by the Catholic University of Leuven

Whitman's 2017 book, Hitler's American Model: The United States and the Making of Nazi Race Law, received wide coverage in the news and academia. [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] Whitman demonstrates the extent to which US racial laws ( Jim Crow laws, separate but equal legal doctrine) influenced the Nazi Regime in formulating the Nuremberg Laws of September 1935. The leading Nazi student of US racial laws was Heinrich Krieger, a jurist who studied at the University of Arkansas School of Law in 1933–34. There, he researched how laws across the US segregated and disenfranchised Native Americans, African Americans, and other disfavored groups like including Asians, Filipinos and Puerto Ricans. Krieger wrote the memorandum relied upon at the meeting June 1934 in which the Nazi racial laws, known as the Nuremberg Laws, were hashed out. Just as the Jim Crow Laws prohibited and criminalized intermarriage between Whites and Blacks, so the Nuremberg Laws prohibited marriages with Jews and threatened punishment. The Nazis departed little from their US model except insofar as that they found it too severe. [11] The so-called one-drop rule, classified as non-white anyone with even a single ″ Negro″ ancestor. This was disturbing even to National Socialist policymaker, who shuddered at the ‘human hardness’ it entailed. According to the Nuremberg Race Laws, a ″full Jew″ was only someone who had three or four Jewish grandparents; there were also – in National Socialist terminology – ″half Jews″ and ″quarter Jews″, but they were not affected by the same discrimination.

In 2017, he was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (AASS). [12]

Works

  • The Verdict of Battle: The Law of Victory and the Making of Modern War. Harvard University Press. 2012. ISBN  978-0-674-06714-1.
  • The Origins of Reasonable Doubt: Theological Roots of the Criminal Trial. Yale University Press. 2008. ISBN  978-0-300-11600-7.
  • Harsh Justice: Criminal Punishment and the Widening Divide Between America and Europe. Oxford University Press. 2005. ISBN  978-0-19-518260-6.
  • "The Two Western Cultures of Privacy: Dignity versus Liberty", Yale Law Journal, Vol. 113, April 2004
  • The Legacy of Roman Law in the German Romantic Era: Historical Vision and Legal Change, Princeton University Press, 1990, ISBN  978-0-691-05560-2
  • Hitler's American Model: The United States and the Making of Nazi Race Law. Princeton University Press, 2017, ISBN  978-0691172422
    • Synopsis: a historical analysis of the ways in which Nazi Germany was influenced by and modeled its policies after the United States during the 1930s. Whitman argues that the Nazis were particularly interested in the racial segregation and anti-miscegenation laws that were prevalent in many American states, as well as the brutal tactics used by American law enforcement to control minority populations. These policies served as a template for the Nazis' own persecution of Jews and other minority groups during the Holocaust. Whitman also explores the ways in which American eugenics theory influenced the Nazi regime's ideas about racial purity and the superiority of the Aryan race.
  • Why the Nazis studied American race laws for inspiration. Aeon, 13 December 2016

References

  1. ^ James Q. Whitman Page. Yale Law School website.
  2. ^ a b "MARTIN WHITMAN Obituary (2018) New York Times". Legacy.com. Retrieved 2022-06-20.
  3. ^ "Syracuse University Celebrates Life of Honorary Trustee Martin J. Whitman '49, H'08 | Syracuse University News". 2018-04-17. Retrieved 2022-06-20.
  4. ^ James Q. Whitman Page. John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Website.
  5. ^ Professors James Whitman '88 and John Witt '99 Win Guggenheim Fellowships. April 19, 2010.
  6. ^ McLemee, Scott (March 8, 2017). "Taking on the Alt-Reich". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved 2017-05-21.
  7. ^ Guo, Jeff (May 19, 2017). "The Nazis as students of America's worst racial atrocities". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2017-05-21.
  8. ^ "How American Racism Influenced Hitler". The New Yorker. 2018-04-23. Retrieved 2023-03-02.
  9. ^ Möschel, Mathias (June 24, 2019). "James Whitman's, Hitler's American Model. The United States and the Making of Nazi Race Law". German Law Journal. 20 (4): 510–513. doi: 10.1017/glj.2019.34. ISSN  2071-8322. S2CID  198622125.
  10. ^ Ira Katznelson (3 October 2017). "What America Taught the Nazis; In the 1930s, the Germans were fascinated by the global leader in codified racism—the United States". Theatlantic.com. Retrieved 22 October 2017. November 2017 Issue
  11. ^ Muravchik, Joshua (9 March 2017). "Did American Racism Inspire the Nazis?". Mosaic Magazine. Retrieved 9 March 2017.
  12. ^ "Five professors elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences". Yale News. 11 April 2017. Retrieved 2017-04-18.