Warren Rosenblum is Professor of History at Webster University. He is the author of Beyond the Prison Gates: Punishment and Welfare in Germany, 1850-1933, which won the Baker-Burton Prize of the Southern Historical Association. He has also published essays on the history of disability, eugnics an...
Warren Rosenblum is Professor of History at Webster University. He is the author of Beyond the Prison Gates: Punishment and Welfare in Germany, 1850-1933, which won the Baker-Burton Prize of the Southern Historical Association. He has also published essays on the history of disability, eugnics and euthanasia, and antisemitism in modern Europe.
He is currently finishing a book about an antisemitic justice scandal in the Weimar Republic, and working on a major study of the treatment of the “feeble-minded” in modern Europe. Rosenblum serves on the Executive Committee of the Holocaust Museum and Learning Center in St. Louis and is a fellow of the Institute for Human Rights and Humanitarian Studies at Webster. He has been a visiting scholar at Harvard University’s Center for European Studies and a visiting professor at SUNY – Binghamton, Bowdoin College, and Deep Springs College. Rosenblum received his bachelor’s degree from Cornell University and has a PhD from the University of Michigan.