List of Illustrations Notes on Contributors Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations Part I: Contextualising Occupation 1. Introduction: Reframing Occupation as a System of Rule (Camilo Erlichman, Leiden University, The Netherlands and Christopher Knowles, King's College London, UK) 2. Preoccupied: Wartime Training for Post-War Occupation in the United States, 1940-45 (Susan L. Carruthers, University of Warwick, UK) 3. Benign Occupations: The Allied Occupation of Germany and the International Law of Occupation (Peter M. R. Stirk, Durham University, UK) Part II: The Past in the Present: Transitional Justice and Managing the Nazi Legacy 4. Transitional Justice? Denazification in the US Zone of Occupied Germany (Rebecca Boehling, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, USA) 5. The Allied Internment of German Civilians in Occupied Germany: Cooperation and Conflict in the Western Zones, 1945-1949 (Andrew H. Beattie, University of New South Wales, Australia) 6. What Do You Do with a Dead Nazi? Allied Policy on the Execution and Disposal of War Criminals, 1945-55 (Caroline Sharples, University of Roehampton, UK) Part III: Doing Occupation: Image and Reality 7. 'My Home, your Castle': British Requisitioning of German Homes in Westphalia (Bettina Blum, Cultural Office at the City of Paderborn, Germany) 8. Game Plan for Democracy: Sport and Youth in Occupied West Germany (Heather L. Dichter, De Montfort University, UK) 9. Occupying the Environment: German Hunters and the American Occupation (Douglas Bell, Texas A&M University, USA) Part IV: Experiencing Occupation: Daily Life and Personal Relationships 10. The Sexualized Landscape of Post-War Germany and the Politics of Cross-Racial Intimacy in the American Zone (Nadja Klopprogge, Freie Universitat Berlin, Germany) 11. Shared Spaces: Social Encounters between French and Germans in Occupied Freiburg, 1945-55 (Ann-Kristin Gloeckner, University of Halle-Wittenberg, Germany) 12. 'Gosh... I Think I'm in a Dream!!': Subjective Experiences and Daily Life in the British Zone (Daniel Cowling, University of Cambridge, UK) Part V: Mediating Occupation: Interactions, Intermediaries, and Legacies 13. 'We are Glad They are Here, but We are Not Rejoicing!' The Catholic Clergy under French and American Occupation (Johannes Kuber, RWTH Aachen University, Germany) 14. From Denazification to Renazification? West German Government Officials after 1945 (Dominik Rigoll, Zentrum fur Zeithistorische Forschung Potsdam, Germany) 15. The Value of Knowledge: Western Intelligence Agencies and Former Members of the SS, Gestapo and Wehrmacht during the Early Cold War (Michael Wala, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany) Notes Select Bibliography Index