German justice

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The magazine Deutsche Justiz was the "official organ of the German administration of justice and legal policy " at the time of National Socialism . It appeared from November 1933 to 1945 and was published by the Reich Minister of Justice during the entire period . Initially, the Prussian Justice Minister Hanns Kerrl and the Bavarian Justice Minister Hans Frank were co-editors.

Legal predecessor

The direct legal predecessor was the journal Preussische Justiz Rechtspflege und Rechtspolitk. Official organ of the Prussian Minister of Justice Hanns Kerrls . It began its publication with No. 40 of September 21, 1933. It ended with issue 46 of November 2, 1933. The legal editorship consisted of State Secretary Roland Freisler , Ministerial Director Max Nadler (lawyer) , Ministerial Director Wilhelm Crohne . The judiciary and public prosecutor Karl Krug (lawyer) participated.

According to the editor Karl Krug of the National Socialist magazine Deutsche Justiz, the legal predecessor of the Prussian Justiz magazine was the traditional Justiz-Ministerialblatt for Prussian legislation and justice , which was first published in 1839 under the name “Justice Ministerial Gazette for Prussian Legislation and Legal Administration”.

Content

Numerous essays by Roland Freisler appeared in the sheet.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Karl Krug: Hundred Years. From the “Preußisches Justizministerialblatt” to “German Justice” in the Greater German Reich , in: Deutsche Justiz (Ed. Reichsminister der Justiz), Issue 51/52 of December 23, 1938, pp. 2020–2022.
  2. Burkhard Koch: Legal Concept and Right of Resistance - Self-Defense against the Unlawful Exercise of State Power in the Rule of Law and under National Socialism (=  writings on public law . Volume 478 ). Duncker & Humblot, 1985, ISBN 3-428-05734-1 , pp. 104 ( limited preview in Google Book search).