Public Law in Germany
A Historical Introduction from the 16th to the 21st Century
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 25 May 2017
- ISBN 9780198798965
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages224 pages
- Size 223x149x18 mm
- Weight 410 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
A concise and simplified summary and translation into English of the author's award-winning longer work Geschichte des öffentlichen Rechts. It offers students an introduction to the history of German public law from the sixteenth century to the end of the twentieth century.
MoreLong description:
German public law has been taught in universities since the early 17th century and continues to this day to be a dominant subject in German legal culture, especially in its modern incarnations of constitutional and administrative law, and European and international law. Michael Stolleis's Public Law in Germany: A Historical Introduction from the 16th to the 21st Century, expertly translated by Thomas Dunlap, provides an account of the fundamental developments in public law that situates current debates in the German Federal Constitutional Court as well as the role of the nation-state in Europe more broadly. It further examines the role of fundamental rights through the lens of Germany's special administrative courts and discusses their important role in the advancement of German law.
Written with students in mind, the book distils Stolleis's masterful four-volume History of Public Law in Germany, the third volume of which (1914-1945) was published by Oxford University Press in 2004. It is an invaluable companion to the understanding of German public law more generally.
this little book is a true vade mecum ... for anyone seeking a primer on the development of German public law scholarship, this little book admirably fits the bill.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
The Emancipation from Roman Law and the Change in the Sources of Constitutional Law
Elements of the Emerging Public Law
Reichspublizistik, Natural Law, International Law, and Gute Policy
Public Law Between Revolution and Restoration
St. Paul's Church [Paulskirche]
Imperial State Law
Administrative Law in the Early Industrial State
The Theory of State Law and Administrative Law under the Weimar Constitution
Controversies over Method and General Theories of the State
Administrative Law in the Weimar Republic
The National Socialist State and Its Public Law
Germany's Legal Status, Reconstruction, Two States
The New 'Value System' [Wertordnung] and the Restoration of the Rechtsstaat
The Social and Interventionist State of the Federal Republic
The State Law, International Law, and Administrative Law of the GDR
European Law and International Law
Reunification
Globalization and the Future of the State
Conclusion