Boris Mirkin-Getzewitsch

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Boris Mirkin-Getzewitsch ( Russian Борис Сергеевич Миркин-Гецевич , French Mirkine Guetzewitch ; born January 1, 1892 in Kiev ; † April 1, 1955 in Paris ; pseudonym: Boris Mirsky ) was a Russian-French legal scholar and temporarily headed the Paris Institute for comparative law .

Life

Mirkin-Getzewitsch studied in Saint Petersburg with a focus on constitutional law . Because of the Russian Revolution he went to Paris , where he temporarily headed the Institute for Comparative Law.

In 1953 Mirkin-Getzewitsch was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences .

His daughter Vitia married Stéphane Hessel .

Fonts

  • Les Constitutions des nations américaines , 1932
  • Droit constitutionnel international , 1933
  • Les Nouvelles tendences du droit constitutionnel , 1935
  • Le Parlamentarisme sous la Convention nationale , 1936
  • La Quatrième république , 1946
  • Les constitutions européennes , 1951–1952

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Rudolf Horn: Legitimation and Limits of the Executive. Berlin 1979. Footnote 64.
  2. Winter, Jay; Prost, Antoine (2013). René Cassin and Human Rights: from the Great War to the Universal Declaration . Cambridge University Press. P. 228. ISBN 9781107032569 .
  3. ^ Members of the American Academy. Listed by election year, 1950-1999 ( [1] ). Retrieved September 23, 2015