Abstract

ABSTRACT The Jasenovac concentration camp (1941-1945) holds a special place on the post-Yugoslav Holocaust map. The aim of the article is to analyze (1) the role of natural conditions in influencing the selection and ongoing operation of the camp; (2) how the authorities managed the post-camp landscape after the war, as well as the current presence of nature at the memorial site; and (3) how the relationship between people and nature is depicted in the Croatian writings on the Jasenovac camp. The analysis is set within the framework of the environmental history of the Porajmos.

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