The young legal scholar

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The young legal scholar (DJR) was a legal training magazine. Under the aegis of Artur Weinmann , it was published every two weeks from 1924 to 1933. After Weinmann was eliminated, Paul Oertmann was the editor; after his death, Oberregierungsrat Karl Doerner until the magazine was discontinued with issue 2/3 of the 19th volume in 1943.

Rubrics

Put simply, "The Young Legal Scholar" consisted of the following headings:

  • critical overview of current legislative amendments
  • Essays
  • Case processing and exams
  • Case law overview
  • Book reviews

Characteristic was the harsh criticism of the existing forms of legal training, formulated in several essays, which was given a lot of space, so that there was little space for dogmatically oriented work. The representation of legal case solutions in the expert opinion and judgment style is also worth mentioning. As a result, both the inclined student and the trainee lawyer were given a solution in the form that was expected of him in the respective examination aimed at.

In the course of 1933 the magazine got a clear National Socialist tendency.

literature

  • Thomas Hoeren : The young legal scholar. A legal training magazine on the eve of the Third Reich , in: Juristische Schulung , 1988, Issue 2, pp. 102-104 (The author wrongly assumed that the magazine was discontinued in 1932)
  • Horst Göppinger : Jurists of Jewish descent in the “Third Reich”. Disenfranchisement and persecution , 2nd, completely revised edition, Munich (Beck) 1990 (p. 390 on The young legal scholar )