Inge Hieblinger

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Inge Hieblinger b. Kleindienst (born January 10, 1928 in Merseburg , † 2007 ) was a German lawyer and professor of constitutional law and legal theory in the GDR. At times she was a member of the People's Chamber for the DFD and a candidate for the Central Committee of the SED.

Life

Inge Hieblinger was born in 1928 into a working-class family in Merseburg. While still in high school, she became a member of the KPD in 1945 and a member of the SED in 1946.

After graduating from high school, she studied law at the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg from 1947 to 1950 . She then worked as the main clerk at the Ministry of Health in 1951 and 1952, before she was able to complete her legal clerkship at the newly formed Halle District Court from 1952 to 1953. She then got a job as an assistant at her University in Halle, and later she was appointed senior assistant. In 1958 she received her doctorate with the dissertation The Relationship between the Ordinance and its Implementation Provision in the Law of the German Democratic Republic: Represented with special consideration of the legislative practice from January 1, 1955 to June 30, 1957 , after which she worked as a perception lecturer in Halle.

In 1964, Hieblinger completed his habilitation with the work The Promotion of Women, an essential feature of the principle of equality between men and women and its implementation in the comprehensive construction of socialism in the German Democratic Republic (at the same time a contribution to the legal status of women in the GDR) , and then she worked as a lecturer until she received a professorship for constitutional law and legal theory in the GDR in 1967. Through her preoccupation with women's rights issues, she also came into the focus of the GDR mass organization Democratic Women's Federation of Germany (DFD), which nominated her as a candidate for the 1967 Volkskammer elections. She then represented the DFD for an electoral period until 1971 in the constitutional and legal committee of the People's Chamber.

In the science-friendly climate of the 1960s in the GDR, the SED also tried to recruit the then 39-year-old professor and elected her as a candidate for the SED Central Committee at the Seventh Party Congress in 1967. She also only sat on this committee until 1971, after which she devoted herself fully to her university activities in Halle. In 1988 Inge Hieblinger retired after entering the retirement age. She was married to the administrative lawyer Rudolf Hieblinger from Halle , who worked at the then Institute for Constitutional Law at the Martin Luther University in Halle-Wittenberg .

Fonts (selection)

  • State and legal theory. Book 2: The establishment of the socialist state. 1966; DNB 36828719X
  • Women in our state ; State Publishing House of the GDR, Berlin 1967; DNB 456986391
  • SED program in facts and figures. The woman in the socialist German Democratic Republic and under the established rule of finance capital in West Germany , co-author Gisela Kamprad, Ed. Propaganda Department of the Central Committee of the SED , 1967; DNB 573998809
  • The state and legal conceptions of F. Engels in their meaning for the socialist state and socialist law . Colloquium of the Staats- u. Law of the Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg on the occasion of the 165th birthday of F. Engels ; DNB 870000292
  • Basic features of the constitutional law of socialist states , co-author Rudolf Hieblinger. Hall 1987; DNB 881179337

literature

  • Günther Buch: Names and dates of important people in the GDR. 3rd, revised and expanded edition. Dietz, Berlin (West) / Bonn 1982, ISBN 3-8012-0081-7 , p. 122.
  • Michael Stolleis : History of Public Law in Germany Vol. 4: Constitutional and Administrative Law Studies in West and East 1945–1990 CH Beck 2017 p. 581 ISBN 9783406707292

Individual evidence

  1. The statutory retirement age for working women began in the GDR until reunification in 1990 at the age of 60.
  2. New Germany newspaper of April 29, 1966, p. 2