Scientists of the State, Science of the State, and the State: Austrian and German Public Lawyers in the Short 20th Century Part 1: The Age of Catastrophe, 1914-1945
Between the First World War and the end of the Cold War, Germany and Austria, whose legal cultures were highly interdependent in terms of persons, conceptions, and institutions, saw eleven or twelve fundamentally different regimes, depending on the interpretation of Austria’s status from 1938-45. La...
Main Author: | Puff Roman |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Sciendo
2012-12-01
|
Series: | Baltic Journal of Law & Politics |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.2478/v10076-012-0013-z |
Similar Items
-
Communicating European Integration in the Age of the World Wars: Print Media Discourses on the Unity of Europe, 1914-1945
by: Florian Greiner
Published: (2014-02-01) -
Communicating European Integration in the Age of the World Wars: Print Media Discourses on the Unity of Europe, 1914-1945
by: Florian Greiner
Published: (2014-02-01) -
Mountains, mountaineering and modernity: a cultural history of German and Austrian mountaineering, 1900-1945
by: Holt, Lee Wallace, 1974-
Published: (2008) -
German, Austrian and Swiss Eurosceptics’ Views on Family Issues
by: Vasily Gribovsky
Published: (2019-06-01) -
SOCIETAL CULTURE: A COMPARISON OF ROMANIAN, AUSTRIAN AND GERMAN STUDENTS PERSPECTIVE
by: CATANA DOINA, et al.
Published: (2012-07-01)