Martin Christopher Dean[1] (born March 14, 1962, in London, Ph.D. in history from Queens' College, Cambridge)[2] is a research scholar at the Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies,
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM).[3][4] He formerly worked as an historian at the Metropolitan Police War Crimes Unit,
Scotland Yard.[5][6]
Selected publications
"The German Gendarmerie, the Ukrainian Schutzmannschaft and the 'Second Wave' of Jewish Killings in Occupied Ukraine: German Policing at the Local Level in the Zhitomir Region, 1941-1944". German History, 14 (2) (1996): 168–192.
Collaboration in the Holocaust: Crimes of the local police in Belorussia and Ukraine, 1941–1944. Palgrave Macmillan, 2000.
ISBN0333688929
^Articles by Dean, M. C. (4 December 2015). "The German Gendarmerie, the Ukrainian Schutzmannschaft and the 'Second Wave' of Jewish Killings in Occupied Ukraine: German Policing at the Local Level in the Zhitomir Region, 1941-1944". German History. 14 (2). Gh.oxfordjournals.org: 168–192.
doi:
10.1093/gh/14.2.168.
^"Past Winners". Jewish Book Council. Retrieved 26 January 2020.
Martin Christopher Dean[1] (born March 14, 1962, in London, Ph.D. in history from Queens' College, Cambridge)[2] is a research scholar at the Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies,
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM).[3][4] He formerly worked as an historian at the Metropolitan Police War Crimes Unit,
Scotland Yard.[5][6]
Selected publications
"The German Gendarmerie, the Ukrainian Schutzmannschaft and the 'Second Wave' of Jewish Killings in Occupied Ukraine: German Policing at the Local Level in the Zhitomir Region, 1941-1944". German History, 14 (2) (1996): 168–192.
Collaboration in the Holocaust: Crimes of the local police in Belorussia and Ukraine, 1941–1944. Palgrave Macmillan, 2000.
ISBN0333688929
^Articles by Dean, M. C. (4 December 2015). "The German Gendarmerie, the Ukrainian Schutzmannschaft and the 'Second Wave' of Jewish Killings in Occupied Ukraine: German Policing at the Local Level in the Zhitomir Region, 1941-1944". German History. 14 (2). Gh.oxfordjournals.org: 168–192.
doi:
10.1093/gh/14.2.168.
^"Past Winners". Jewish Book Council. Retrieved 26 January 2020.