Skip to main content
To attend online and register, click here

5 November 2025 - 5 November 2025

2:00PM - 3:00PM

Room TBC and online via Teams

Share page:

The Centre for Criminal Law and Criminal Justice welcomes you to the launch of the book Nuremberg's Citizen Prosecutor: Benjamin Ferencz and the Birth of International Justice, written by Professor Gregory S Gordon. This event is both online and in person.

This is the image alt text

Durham Law School

Benjamin Ferencz led a remarkable life as a warrior for justice. In 1947, the 27-year-old—a dirt-poor immigrant who had graduated from Harvard Law and served as General Patton’s lead war crimes investigator—became a chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials. There, he took on what the Associated Press called the "biggest murder trial in history," prosecuting Hitler’s Einsatzgruppen killing squads. He later pioneered Holocaust reparations, led the charge to criminalize aggressive war, and became a driving force behind the International Criminal Court (ICC), helping craft its founding charter and, as the last living Nuremberg prosecutor, participating in the ICC’s first trial. In this first major English language biography of a Nuremberg chief prosecutor, Gregory Gordon, a former war crimes prosecutor himself and the first scholar with full access to Ferencz’s personal papers, has uncovered incredible new “missing link” details, which, combined, reveal a golden thread running through Ferencz’s career and better contextualize his landmark achievements

Further details are available on the publisher’s website here 

Pricing

Free