Siberian labor camps, notably established during the Soviet era, were facilities where political prisoners, criminals, and other perceived enemies of the state were sent to perform hard labor under harsh conditions. These camps, part of the Gulag system, operated from the 1920s until the 1950s and were characterized by extreme temperatures, inadequate food, and brutal treatment. Many inmates suffered from malnutrition, disease, and overwork, leading to high mortality rates. The camps served both as a means of punishment and as a tool for economic development through forced labor.
Concentration Camps Extermination Camps Labour Camps Transit Camps Death Camps.
Concentration camps , transit camps , forced labour camps (aka) "work camps" , and death camps.
Concentration Camps Transit Camps Labour Camps Death Camps Extermination Camps.
The prisoners had to pay for the camps, with their labour and/or possessions - and leave the SS with a profit.
The key distinction was between extermination camps and labour camps ("ordinary" concentration camps).
Concentration camps were built almost immediately after Hitler came to power. used as prisons and labour camps
Joseph Stalin.
In Siberian slave labor camps.
During the holocaust their was onlya small type of camps Concentration camps - Camps where is to just keep people and torturing them to concentrate them. Extermination camps - Camps where it only main purpose to to Exterminate people asmuch as possible Death camps - Same as a Extermination camp but only Kills people less frequently Labour camps - A camp which is only main purpose is to use prisoners as slave labour workers POW camps - Camps for Prisoners of War
Extermination camps (killing centres).Concentration camps (harsh forced labour camps, where the inmates were generally worked to death).Combined extermation and concentration camps.
Gulags.
paid labourers