Gustav Radbruch (21 November 1878 – 23 November 1949) was a German legal scholar and politician. He served as Minister of Justice of Germany during the... 12 KB (1,258 words) - 00:09, 22 January 2024 |
formulated in a 1946 essay by the German law professor and politician Gustav Radbruch. According to the theory, a judge who encounters a conflict between... 6 KB (766 words) - 23:09, 8 March 2024 |
Radbruch may refer to: Radbruch, a municipality in the district of Lüneburg, in Lower Saxony, Germany Gustav Radbruch, a German law professor and politician... 342 bytes (67 words) - 15:34, 22 March 2013 |
Pauli, Bertolt Brecht, Max Horkheimer, Karl Loewenstein, Carl Schmitt, Gustav Radbruch, Ernst Cassirer, Ernst Bloch and Konrad Adenauer. LMU has recently... 53 KB (3,812 words) - 23:59, 1 May 2024 |
Wirth government and in the Reichstag because Minister of Justice Gustav Radbruch and Chancellor Wirth interpreted them as directed against right-wing... 30 KB (3,098 words) - 18:40, 6 April 2024 |
English-speaking legal systems until the 20th century. German jurist Gustav Radbruch, writing in 1903, considered the correlative relationship between right... 14 KB (1,446 words) - 04:48, 30 March 2024 |
legalism). Legal positivism in Germany has been famously rejected by Gustav Radbruch in 1946 where prosecution of Nazi supporters faced a challenge of assessing... 25 KB (3,224 words) - 10:18, 10 April 2024 |
Macmillan; Oxford 1995) Friedrich Paulsen (July 16, 1846–August 14, 1908) Gustav Radbruch (1878–1949) (Routledge 2000) Paul Rée (1849–1901) (Oxford 1995) Hans... 15 KB (1,628 words) - 18:08, 12 April 2024 |
Reinhold Zippelius Neil MacCormick William E. May Martha Nussbaum Gustav Radbruch Joseph Raz Jeremy Waldron Friedrich Carl von Savigny Robert Summers... 20 KB (2,489 words) - 18:16, 27 February 2024 |