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New Books on Japan: "Twelve Japanese War Criminals and One Who Got Away"

  • June 16, 2026
  • 7:00 PM - 8:30 PM
  • Zoom

Tuesday, June 16, 2026 | 7:00-8:30 PM ET
Wednesday, June 17, 2026 | 9:00-10:30 AM AEST

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Twelve Japanese War Criminals and One Who Got Away (University of Hawai'i Press, 2026)

Presenters: Sandra Wilson, Professor, College of Law, Arts and Social Sciences, Murdoch University and Robert Cribb, Emeritus Professor of Australian History, The Australian National University

Discussant: Sarah Kovner, Senior Research Scholar, Arnold A. Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies, Columbia University

Moderator: Kirsten Ziomek, Associate Professor of History, Adelphi University

The Modern Japan History Association invites the wider community to a conversation with Sandra Wilson (Murdoch University) and Robert Cribb (ANU), who will be speaking about their recent book Twelve Japanese War Criminals and One Who Got Away. In this book, Robert Cribb and Sandra Wilson tell the stories of twelve people who were convicted of war crimes in Allied courts in the Asia-Pacific region after the Second World War. Included is the story of one man who escaped prosecution. The crimes were committed in the Philippines, Burma, Thailand, Java, Malaya, Singapore, the Maluku islands, New Guinea, and Japan. The characters examined range from senior figures—General Honma Masaharu, who was convicted for the Bataan “death march,” and Japan’s wartime prime minister Tōjō Hideki—to lower-ranking and lesser-known people: a POW camp commander, a camp doctor, a Korean guard, a nurse charged with assisting in vivisection, a doctor convicted of cannibalism, a pimp, a Taiwanese interpreter, a businessman convicted of assault, an officer convicted of massacre, and another convicted of a single execution. Tsuji Masanobu, the man who escaped, was responsible for at least two massacres. He was eventually elected to parliament, indicating the willingness of some elements in postwar Japanese society to overlook wartime atrocities. The book examines the backgrounds and careers of each character and explains how they came to commit the acts for which they were convicted. It also considers their subsequent careers, if they survived (several were executed for their crimes). Based on years of meticulous research, the book brings to life the texture of individual action and experience in the tumultuous years of conflict and occupation during the Pacific War. The authors recognize Japanese cruelty but also suggest that most of the convicted war criminals were not inherently evil. Some were out of their depth or were forced into circumstances where they made bad decisions; some obeyed illegal orders or were caught in impossible situations in a war that Japan fought with insufficient resources. Ironically, the one who got away was probably the worst of them all. Sarah Kovner (Columbia) will serve as interlocutor.


The Modern Japan History Association is a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) non-profit organization supported by member contributions.

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