Jasenovac.

Medicine, Science, and the Law
Roger W Byard

Abstract

Jasenovac was a camp run by the Ustaše Supervisory Service (UNS) of the Independent State of Croatia during World War II. It was located approximately 100 km south-east of Zagreb on the banks of the Sava River. Although the purpose of, and number of deaths in, the camp have been debated, it appears that a significant number of Serbs, Roma and Jews died and/or were executed at this site between 1941 and 1945. The site demonstrates that not all detention camps at this time were controlled by the German government and that cultural/religious groups other than the Jews were detainees. Balkan mass graves may therefore derive from different conflicts at different times, and so establishing accurate conclusions from excavations often requires a verifiable and plausible context and an understanding of burial processes.

References

Nov 6, 2001·Medicine, Science, and the Law·G L de la Grandmaison, M Durigon
Mar 1, 1997·Journal of Clinical Forensic Medicine·T Kahana, J Hiss
Sep 2, 2008·Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine·Tanja HollmannMichael Tsokos
Jan 20, 2010·Forensic Science, Medicine, and Pathology·Roger W Byard, Calle Winskog
Nov 16, 2019·Forensic Science, Medicine, and Pathology·Igor Vaduvesković, Marija Djuric

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