Brun-Otto Bryde

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Brun-Otto Bryde (born January 12, 1943 in Hamburg ) is a German lawyer. He was a judge at the Federal Constitutional Court from January 23, 2001 to February 2, 2011 .

Life

Bryde graduated from the Sankt Ansgar School in 1962 . After studies at the University of Hamburg (1st Legal State Examination 1966) and clerkship and passing the second legal state examination in Hamburg in 1969 Bryde in 1971 was with a thesis on central economic policy advisory bodies in the parliamentary constitutional order in Herbert Kruger at Hamburg University Ph.D. . After working abroad as a lecturer at the law faculty in Addis Ababa and a Law and Modernization Fellow at the Yale Law School in New Haven , Bryde was senior scientific advisor at the University of Hamburg from 1974 to 1982.

In 1980 Brydes completed his habilitation with a thesis supervised by Ingo von Münch on constitutional development - stability and dynamism in constitutional law in the Federal Republic of Germany .

From 1982 to 1987 Bryde was Professor of Public Law at the University of the Federal Armed Forces in Munich ; in 1987 he accepted a professorship for public law and science of politics at the Justus Liebig University in Giessen . The main research interests of the legal scholar Bryde are constitutional law , constitutional comparison and comparative governance, international law and in particular human rights and legal sociology . From 1992 to 1998 he was the chairman of the Association for Legal Sociology. From 1992 to 1993 he was a member of the Constitutional Advisory Board of Hesse and from 1997 to 1999 of the Enquête Commission “Parliamentary Reform ” of the Hessian state parliament . Bryde was a member of the UN Committee for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination in 2000/2001 . He is co-editor of the journal “Constitution and Law in Overseas”.

From January 23, 2001 to February 2, 2011, Bryde was a member of the first Senate of the Federal Constitutional Court on the proposal of Bündnis 90 / Die Grünen , he was elected on December 8, 2000. When he reached the maximum age limit of 68 years, he left the service.

Honors

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Page of the Office of the Federal President , accessed on February 3, 2011

Web links