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  1. Georg Jellinek (16 June 1851 – 12 January 1911) was a German public lawyer and was considered to be " the exponent of public law in Austria“. [1] Life. Jellinek was born in Leipzig. [2] . His father, Adolp Jellinek, was an Austrian rabbi. [2] From 1867, Jellinek studied law, history of art and philosophy at the University of Vienna.

  2. Georg Jellinek was a German legal and political philosopher who, in his book Die sozialethische Bedeutung von Recht, Unrecht und Strafe (1878; 2nd ed., 1908; “The Social-Ethical Significance of Right, Wrong, and Punishment”), defined the law as an ethical minimum—i.e., as a body of normative.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Jan 20, 2023 · Learn about Georg Jellinek, a German jurist and political thinker who contributed to the theory of public law, constitutional law, and international law. Discover his concept of State self-limitation, his influence on the Eranos Circle, and his views on the ethical and legal order.

  4. Summary. Starting out from the assumption that legal positivism is premised on the assumption of a strict separation between the world of law, the world of morals and the social or ethical world, Kersten explains that George Jellinek’s phenomenological theory of reflective legal positivism aims to answer the question of how the world of law ...

  5. 1851 – 1911. Georg Jellinek (1851-1911) was a German legal historian and theorist who wrote on human and civil rights, electoral law, and the rights of minorities in the late 19th century. His history of the French Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen shows the influence of the declarations of the individual colonies, such as ...

  6. Where previous research has called attention to his theory of conceptual “types” and his application of contemporary neo-Kantian epistemology to the law, this article explores his thinking on the nature of values and value judgments, and the possibilities for objectivity in the legal and political sciences.

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  8. Georg Jellinek (1851–1911), German jurist, was born in Leipzig, the son of a rabbi and scholar. In 1857 the family moved to Vienna. Jellinek studied philosophy, history, and law there and in Heidelberg and Leipzig. In 1872 he received a doctorate in philosophy from the University of Leipzig and in 1874 a doctorate in law from the University ...

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