During the Holocaust, bureaucracy played a large role within the Nazi Regime. Bureaucracy is a form of government that works through a chain of command hierarchy deriving from a high officials decision. The Nazi Regime had a structure for the specific purpose to remedy inefficiencies and exterminate Jews. The importance in Nazi Germany’s bureaucratic structure remained the basis for everything; everything went through the system. The Nazi’s bureaucratic structure was important in developing efficient methods of execution through loyal and strategic gatherings such as the Wannsee Conference, through the Nazi chains of command and extensive detail.
The Nazi bureaucratic system was the prime catalyst for finding solutions to problems the party
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The Nazi bureaucratic state in its entirety is responsible. However with the efficient chain of command the Nazis had in place provided a sense of no fault for anyone who participated. The Nazi’s extensive critical planning in immense detail helped the Nazi Regime prevail. Their research provided for an innovated war effort to benefit the Nazi goal of racial purification. The Nazi’s bureaucratic structure greatly enhanced their development of newer means of mass killings as well as efficient bureaucratic practices. The high officials signed the documents to instate the mass gassings, followed by their efficient bureaucratic practice. The hiccups the Nazis encountered were towards the end of the war when America entered the war and after the war when the Nuremburg trials occurred where Nazis were tried for conducting genocide. The Nazi structural system was efficient on both ends of the bureaucracy; the high ranked officials gave orders and through the chain everyone followed through with what was ordered on down for the final result. Everything that occurred can be traced back to the Nazi bureaucratic structure and how they established an efficient process to finalize decisions. Bureaucratic efficiency was a strong catalyst for the Nazis during their extermination process of the Jews and other prisoners. Throughout the course of the Holocaust, there were many policies passed and redefined structure put in place to ensure the Nazi goals were met. The Wannsee Conference and invention of Zyklon B were superlative examples of how well their bureaucratic structure worked. As a result, the Nazi’s were capable and accomplished inciting devastation while keeping the blame from one single
before he came to power, he just used World War II as his golden opportunity to turn his dream into a reality. Others, with Andreas Hillgruber, argue Hitler was the only reason genocide even happened. If Hitler had not been in control, the Holocaust would have ceased to exist. His key sources include the Nuremburg Trials, quoting him saying “this struggle will not end with annihilation of Aryan mankind, but with the extermination of the Jewish people of Europe.” By using Hitler’s own words against him, Hillgruber makes it easy to prove Hitler’s malicious intent clearly and depict him as the mastermind behind the mass murder of the Jewish population. Gerald Fleming creates the last sub-argument in his book, “Hitler and the Final Solution,” provides an in-depth historical evaluation of German fascism and the mechanization behind the Nazi Party bureaucracy. His main point of reference is David Irving’s, “Hitler’s War,”
The main political changes that the Nazi Party or the NSDAP endured during the period of November, 1923 until January 1933 was its rise from a small extreme right party to a major political force. It is vitally important that the reasons behind this rise to power also be examined, to explain why the NSDAP was able to rise to the top. However first a perspective on the Nazi party itself is necessary to account for the changing political fortunes of the Nazi Party.
Hitler started volunteering for the German army.’ This supports one way of how he rose up to power and did everything he did. In addition, “As leader of the Nazi party he orchestrated the holocaust, which resulted in the death of four million Jews.’’ (BCC programmes) This shows Hitler was the one who was blamed and planned everything out.
2001. OUTLINE The government of Nazi Germany greatly resembled the Party, the government in 1984, as both were very power-hungry governments. I. System of government A. A. Nazi and Party ideology B. B. Propaganda and control of media II. Children A. Education of children B. Youth organizations III.
During the Holocaust the mass murder of jews was a worldwide tragedy and when a tragedy happens usually your first question is why? The two groups of devoted researchers for the Holocaust are split into the Intentionalist group and the Functionalist group. As said by Mimi-Cecilia Pascoe in Intentionalism and Functionalism: Explaining the Holocaust “The intentionalist position suffers greatly from a lack of adequate evidence, and consequently cannot prove Hitler’s intentions beyond reasonable doubt. On the other hand, the functionalist position is better able to compensate for the lack of evidence, and thus provides a more solid historical explanation for the Holocaust (Pascoe 1).” The on going argument of whether the Holocaust was intentional or a choice in the moment is the Intentionalist vs. Functionalist case and either side has many different ways of portraying their evidence on the topic; the arguments are both have convincing arguments but in
Within Nazi government, Hitler acted as the final source of authority, which serves as evidence against the notion that Hitler was ‘weak’. Having consolidated power by 1934 Hitler was, at least theoretically, omnipotent, being Chancellor, Head of State and “supreme judge of the nation”. However, the notion that Nazi government systematically pursued the clear objectives of the Fuhrer is challenged by the reality of Nazi government structure. It has been widely accepted by historians that the Nazi State was a chaotic collection of rival power blocs. Mommsen’s explanation that this was the result of Hitler’s apathy towards government a...
To Weber’s critics and supporters alike, the Holocaust serves as an example of the negative consequences of the means based reality of bureaucracy. To further explore this assertion, the mid-twentieth century mass genocide can be evaluated with both an ends-based rationality and Weber’s means-based rationality.
The man responsible for the Holocaust was Adolf Hitler and his Nazi war-machine. As an Austrian born soldier-turned-politician, Hitler was fascinated with the concept of the racial supremacy of the German people. He was also a very bitter, very evil little man.
...overy, and return to the prewar economic atmosphere they had been used to. All of these factors together were far too much to expect a very strong, well-organized party with popular support to deal with. Unfortunately, the fact that there was no strong, organized and well-liked party to take control made matters even worse. After years of stagnant policy making, and very little change, it is no wonder the people turned to something new, and something that promised to make things change. It is truly unfortunate for human kind, that this party happened to be the Nazi Party.
The Holocaust, the mass killing of the Jewish people in Europe, is the largest genocide in history to this date. Over the course of the Holocaust nearly six million Jewish people were killed by the Nazi Party and Germany led by Adolf Hitler. There are multiple contributing factors to the Holocaust that made it so large in scope. Historians argue which of these factors were most significant. The most significant contributing factor is the source of the Holocaust, the reason it occurred. This source is Adolf Hitler and his hatred for Jewish people. In comparison to the choices of the Allies to not accept Jewish refugees and to not take direct military action to end the Holocaust, the most significant contributing factor of the Holocaust is that Adolf Hitler was able to easily rise to power with the support of the German people and rule Germany.
Support for the Nazi party was due to the growing belief that it was a
After World War I, the social climate in Germany was depressing. The German people were humiliated by their country's defeat and by the terms of the Treaty of Versailles. The financial depression that resulted left millions of individuals out of work. The German government was weak, and the people sought new leadership. These conditions provided an opportune setting for a new leader, Adolf Hitler, and his party, the National Socialist German Workers Party. Hitler, reckless and powerful, was able to fan the flames of an ancient hatred into a wild and out of control holocaust (Altman 12).
But this wasn’t enough the Nazi party they wanted them gone from the world a complete genocide. At the Wannsee Conference in 1942, the Germans came up with a solution to their “Jew Problem” (The History Place holocaust timeline). They planned to wipe 11 million people from the face of the earth, at a faster rate than their camps natural causes (starvation and over working), and treatment accordingly policy (gas chambers) (The History Place holocaust timeline). This is horrific to think of a governing body having a convention to map out the genocide of a whole race and regarding said plan as a solution. The Nazis started to carry out complete genocide against the socially undesired and with every inch the Allies made closer to stopping the harder they relentlessly pushed to finish the extermination. The Nazis began to feel the tables of war turning against their favor and started to try to finish the final solution. Seeing the end near the Nazi party started to kill the problem quicker using mass graves with firing squads, and pushing more people to the gas chamber. Hitler surrounded by Allies soldiers sees no way out and takes his own life instead taking the embarrassment of loss and being charged with crimes of war. The war was over but Hitler’s death camps claimed the lives of approximately six million
The Nazi’s perpetrated many horrors during the Holocaust. They enacted many cruel laws. They brainwashed millions into foolishly following them and believing their every word using deceitful propaganda tactics. They forced many to suffer doing embarrassing jobs and to live in crowded ghettos. They created mobile killing squads to exterminate their enemies.
MODERN HISTORY – RESEARCH ESSAY “To what extent was Nazi Germany a Totalitarian state in the period from 1934 to 1939?” The extent to which Nazi Germany was a totalitarian state can be classed as a substantial amount. With Hitler as Fuhrer and his ministers in control of most aspects of German social, political, legal, economical, and cultural life during the years 1934 to 1939, they mastered complete control and dictation upon Germany. In modern history, there have been some governments, which have successfully, and others unsuccessfully carried out a totalitarian state. A totalitarian state is one in which a single ideology is existent and addresses all aspects of life and outlines means to attain the final goal, government is run by a single mass party through which the people are mobilized to muster energy and support.