Black, Peter R. (1983). «Ernst Kaltenbrunner and The Final Solution». I Braham, Randolph L. Contemporary Views on the Holocaust (på engelsk). Springer Netherlands. s. 183–199. ISBN978-94-009-6681-9. doi:10.1007/978-94-009-6681-9_8. Besøkt 14. mars 2020. «Few of those who stood on the defendants’ dock at the trial of the major war criminals before the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg in 1945–1946 inspired more revulsion than Ernst Kaltenbrunner, erstwhile chief of the Reich Security Main Office (Reichssicherheitshauptamt — RSHA). Born in 1903, in Ried im Innkreis, Austria, this tall, hulking, scarfaced lawyer joined the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (NSDAP) in 1930 and the elite Schutzstaffel, or SS, in 1931.»
«Dr. Jacob Robinson, Historian,dies at 88». The New York Times (på engelsk). 28. oktober 1977. ISSN0362-4331. Besøkt 18. august 2019. «He was the founder of the institute or Jewish Affairs and was a consultant to Justice Robert H. Jackson, chief counsel at the Nuremberg war crime trials in 1946.»
Sands, Philippe (22. mai 2016). «How the Nuremberg trials found names for the Nazis' crimes». The Guardian (på engelsk). ISSN0261-3077. Besøkt 9. august 2020. «In studying these materials, Lemkin found a pattern of behaviour to which he gave a label, to describe the crime with which Frank could be charged. He called it ‘genocide’. Unlike Lauterpacht, with his focus on crimes against humanity, which aimed at the protection of individuals, he was more concerned with the protection of groups. He had worked tirelessly to get the crime of genocide into Frank’s trial, but on this last day of the trial he was too unwell to attend.»
«Dr. Jacob Robinson, Historian,dies at 88». The New York Times (på engelsk). 28. oktober 1977. ISSN0362-4331. Besøkt 18. august 2019. «He was the founder of the institute or Jewish Affairs and was a consultant to Justice Robert H. Jackson, chief counsel at the Nuremberg war crime trials in 1946.»
Sands, Philippe (22. mai 2016). «How the Nuremberg trials found names for the Nazis' crimes». The Guardian (på engelsk). ISSN0261-3077. Besøkt 9. august 2020. «In studying these materials, Lemkin found a pattern of behaviour to which he gave a label, to describe the crime with which Frank could be charged. He called it ‘genocide’. Unlike Lauterpacht, with his focus on crimes against humanity, which aimed at the protection of individuals, he was more concerned with the protection of groups. He had worked tirelessly to get the crime of genocide into Frank’s trial, but on this last day of the trial he was too unwell to attend.»