Klaus Sterne -Wikipedia

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Source: Free encyclopedia “Wikipedia”

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Klaus Stern Klaus Stern , January 11, 1932-) is a German constitutional scholar. Representative books, “National Law,” (5 volumes in total), are considered to be one of the basic literature of constitutional science in Germany, and is also exploded in Japanese.

Born in Nuremberg, southern Germany, he studied from 1951 to 1955 at the University of Aerralangen and the University of Munich. In 1956, he obtained a doctoral law at the University of Munich at the University of Munich, in the Ph.D. Public dissertation and the Interpretation Principles of the Federal Constitution Court.

In 1961, he earned a professor qualification at the University of Munich at the University of Munich, and was invited by Berlin Jiyu University in 1962 in 1962.

In 1967, he was appointed Professor at the University of Cologne as a successor to Hans Peters, and from 1969 to 1971, the University of Faculty of Law, and from 1971 to 1973. From 1976 to 2000, he also served as a judge of the Nortline Vesfahren’s State Constitutional Court. In 1997, he retired from Cologne University.

In 2006, he was selected as a visitor by the Japanese Academy, and in 2009 his honored Ph.

The book and papers, including the masterpiece of the National Law, have a major impact on German public law science. There are also many lectures coming to Japan, which also affects Japanese public law scholars.

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“German Federal Republic of Law” ( The constitutional law of the Federal Republic of Germany ) Volumes in total

  • Volume I: “Basic concept of national law, structural principle of the Constitution” (first edition 1977, 2nd edition 1984)
  • Volume II: “National Organization, National Effects, Finance / Budget, Emergency Constitution” (1980)
  • Volume III: “Basic Rights General” (1st minute: 1988/2nd volume: 1994)
  • Volume IV: “Basic Rights” (1st minute: 1999/2nd volume: 2011)
  • Volume V: “German Constitutional History” (1999)

The writing is basically based on Stern itself, but some of the III and the IV volume are written by Michael Zachs and Johannes Deep Line. The Japanese translation is also appeared as “Stern German Constitution II II” (Nobuyama Sha, 2009) according to Noriyuki Inoue and others, but this book is an abstract of the parts that are considered to be particularly important for Japanese constitutional science. be.

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