Rudolf Arzinger

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Rudolf Arzinger (born February 23, 1922 in Sondershausen ; † April 9, 1970 ) was a German international lawyer in Leipzig.

Life

He came from a family of employees. After the Second World War he worked for a short time as an interpreter in the Red Army , later as a teacher of Russian . From 1946 to 1950 he studied law at the universities of Leipzig and Rostock . From 1950 to 1952 he worked as an assistant at the University of Leipzig and at the same time wrote his dissertation with Karl Polak . In 1954 he received his doctorate. From 1951 to 1958 he was a lecturer in international law, constitutional and legal theory at the Karl Marx University Leipzig (KMU), then director of the Institute for constitutional and legal theory. In 1958/59 and 1963/64 he worked as vice dean of the legal faculty of SMEs. In 1959 he became a professor of international law. In 1961 he was co-founder and until 1970 director of the Institute for International Law at the Law Faculty of SMEs. In 1964 he completed his habilitation.

From 1954 to 1956 he was a scientific advisor in the KPD ban process before the Federal Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe. He was a member of the Presidium of the League for the United Nations in the GDR. In 1965 he was elected President of the newly founded Society for International Law in the German Democratic Republic in Berlin . He held this position until his death. He died after a car accident.

Arzinger had been a member of the NSDAP since 1943 . After the war he joined the SED in 1946 . He and his wife Helmtraut Arzinger-Jonasch had their son Rainer Arzinger, who died in an accident in 2006.

literature

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Individual evidence

  1. ^ Former National Socialists in Pankow's service. P. 6.
  2. VDGN