<oai_dc:dc xmlns:oai_dc="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/ http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc.xsd"><dc:coverage>United States, Georgia, Clarke County, Athens, 33.96095, -83.37794</dc:coverage><dc:creator>Marie Amann, Diane</dc:creator><dc:date>2026-01-01</dc:date><dc:description>&lt;p&gt;Women seldom surface in conventional accounts of the many war crimes trials that took place after World War II. Yet as this chapter shows, hundreds of women lawyers and other professionals were present, thus helping to lay the foundations of an international criminal justice project that continues to this day. Combining methodologies of narrative with theories sounding in global legal history and feminist scholarship and discussing what it reveals as dances of absence-presence, visible-invisible, and inclusion-exclusion, this chapter first examines how and why women were absented and then surfaces their contributions. It concludes with a look at contemporary international legal practice.&lt;/p&gt;</dc:description><dc:description>international criminal justice -- international criminal law -- international law -- Nuremberg -- women lawyers -- feminist scholarship -- war crimes -- crime of aggression -- legal history -- global legal history -- narrative -- legal practice -- trials -- gender -- race -- inclusion/exclusion -- women journalists -- international law history -- Criminal Law -- International Humanitarian Law -- International Law</dc:description><dc:format>application/pdf</dc:format><dc:rights>http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/</dc:rights><dc:subject>Law--History</dc:subject><dc:subject>Constitutional law</dc:subject><dc:subject>Law--Study and teaching</dc:subject><dc:title>Absented at the Creation: Nuremberg Women and International Criminal Justice</dc:title><dc:type>Text</dc:type></oai_dc:dc>