Helmut Schreiner

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Helmut Schreiner (born December 4, 1942 in Krenglbach , Upper Austria , † September 26, 2001 in Salzburg ) was an Austrian politician ( ÖVP ) and university professor. From 1969 to 2001 he was a member of the Salzburg State Parliament and from 1989 to 2001 President of the Salzburg State Parliament.

education and profession

Schreiner attended elementary school from 1949 to 1953, before he graduated from the humanistic grammar school in Wilhering near Linz from 1953 , where he also passed the Matura in 1961 . After his 1961-1962 military service had served, he studied from 1962 jurisprudence at the University of Vienna and received his doctorate in 1966 for Dr. iur. In 1967 he worked as a legal trainee at the District Court of Eferding in Upper Austria and in 1967 became assistant to the university professor René Marcic at the chair for constitutional law, Austrian constitutional law and legal philosophy at the University of Salzburg . In 1979 Schreiner was appointed university lecturer for legal philosophy, methodology of law, general political theory and Austrian constitutional law. In 1982 he was appointed associate professor at the University of Salzburg.

Helmut Schreiner was involved in numerous social projects in the Holy Land . He was a member of the Knightly Order of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem .

Politics and functions

Schreiner was sworn in as a member of the Salzburg state parliament on May 14, 1969 and worked from 1974 to 1977 as the deputy chairman of the state parliament club of the Salzburg People's Party. Afterwards he was club chairman of the ÖVP state parliament club from 1977 to 1989, before he was elected president of the Salzburg state parliament on May 3, 1989. Schreiner held this office until his death.

Schreiner was active within the party from 1983 to 1989 as ÖVP city party chairman for Salzburg, where he had already been regional chairman of the Young People's Party between 1970 and 1976 .

Schreiner died on September 26, 2001 during a session of the state parliament. After a verbal exchange of blows with a member of the parliament, Schreiner slumped in his chair shortly after nine o'clock as a result of a heart attack and died in the meeting room despite attempts to resuscitate him.

Fonts

  • with Ilmar Tammelo : Fundamentals and basic procedures of legal logic (= Uni-Taschenbücher. 412 and 685). 2 volumes. Verlag Documentation, Munich 1974–1977, ISBN 3-7940-2627-6 (Vol. 1), ISBN 3-7940-2659-4 (Vol. 2).
  • Intersubjective Acceptability as a Problem of Legal Methodology. Shown using examples from Austrian constitutional law. Salzburg 1979, (Salzburg, University, habilitation paper, 1979).
  • The intersubjectivity of valuations. On the justifiability of evaluations in legal thinking through ethically obliged reasoning (= writings on legal theory, H. 91). Berlin, Duncker & Humblot 1980, ISBN 3-428-04628-5 (also: Salzburg, University, habilitation paper, 1980).
  • The Salzburg Regional Planning Act 1992 (= series of publications by the ÖVP Landtag Club Salzburg. Vol. 1). IT-Verlag, Salzburg 1993, ISBN 3-900603-11-1 .
  • The Salzburger Grundverkehrsgesetz 1993 (= series of publications of the ÖVP Landtag Club Salzburg. Vol. 2). IT-Verlag, Salzburg 1994, ISBN 3-900603-14-6 .

literature

  • Franz Schausberger (Ed.): Commitment and Citizenship. Helmut Schreiner in memory (= series of publications by the Research Institute for Political-Historical Studies of the Dr. Wilfried Haslauer Library, Salzburg. Vol. 18). Böhlau, Vienna et al. 2002, ISBN 3-205-77072-2 .
  • Richard Voithofer: Political Elites in Salzburg. A biographical handbook from 1918 to the present (= series of publications by the Research Institute for Political and Historical Studies of the Dr. Wilfried Haslauer Library, Salzburg. Vol. 32). Böhlau, Vienna et al. 2007, ISBN 978-3-205-77680-2 .

Individual evidence

  1. ^ New Volksblatt of September 27, 2001: “Salzburg. The President of the Landtag died of a heart attack at the meeting. The excitement after the argument with the FP mandate was too much for him "