Nadine Grotkamp

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Nadine Grotkamp is a German lawyer and ancient historian as well as a private lecturer at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main . She is considered a recognized expert in the history of ancient international law.

Career

Until 2002, Grotkamp studied ancient history , law and philosophy at the Philipps University in Marburg and the University of Paris IV (Sorbonne). After acquiring the title Magistra Artium , she moved to the Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main to study law, which she completed in 2004 with the first state examination. Until 2007 she was employed at the Max Planck Institute for European Legal History , where in 2006 she organized the Forum for Young Legal Historians. In 2007, she was with a thesis on " International Law in the Roman Principate" in trade "Ancient History" to Dr. phil. PhD.

During her legal clerkship , which she completed in Frankfurt am Main, she worked as a research assistant for Guido Pfeifer at the Chair for Ancient Legal History, European Private Law History and Civil Law . After completing the second state examination, she was again a research assistant at the Max Planck Institute for European Legal History from 2009 to 2010, where she was coordinator of the International Max Planck Research School for Comparative Legal History as well as a visiting lecturer at the Université Lumière Lyon 2 before returning in 2011 switched to Guido Pfeifer.

From 2012 she headed a sub-project on legal protection in Hellenistic Egypt in the LOEWE focus “Judicial and extrajudicial conflict resolution”. In 2013 she became “Compensation as a performance surrogate” with a thesis. For the assessment of damage in the event of delay and impossibility "also to Dr. jur. PhD. Two years later, she completed her habilitation in the areas of ancient legal history , Roman law , civil law and European private law history . Before that, since 2014, she has represented several professorships at the Georg-August University of Göttingen and the Friedrich Schiller University of Jena .

Nadine Grotkamp looks after the papyrus collection of the law faculty in Frankfurt am Main. She is a member of the civil law teachers' association .

Scientific focus

Grotkamp, ​​a fully qualified lawyer and ancient historian, combines in research and teaching in particular the scientific fields of "ancient legal history" and "ancient history". With her somewhat revised dissertation, which was published in 2007 under the title International Law in Principle. Possibility and dissemination appeared in Nomos Verlag , it made a "fundamental contribution to the history of international law". Due to the very poor source of sources, in particular the complete lack of original texts from international treaties, your international legal investigation is considered “as courageous as it is meritorious”. Karl-Heinz Ziegler concludes in his review that Grotkamp's book is “one of the most important works that have been presented on the history of international law in the last [sic!] Decades”.

Grotkamp also deals scientifically with the research and interpretation of legal papyri as a genre of legal sources. In August 2010 she gave a lecture at the “26e Congrès international de papyrologie” in Genève on the subject of “Theft in Ptolemaic Egypt”. At the XVIII. Forum of Young Legal Historians / Association of Young Legal Historians [AYLH] in May / June 2012 in Vienna , Grotkamp presented her habilitation project under the title “Unregulated or regulated law enforcement in Hellenistic Egypt”, citing various papyrological sources as the basis of her research.

Works

  • International law in principle. Possibility and diffusion. Nomos, Baden-Baden 2009, ISBN 978-3-83294-826-9 .
  • Compensation as a performance surrogate. The assessment of damage in the mutual obligation relationship in the event of delay and impossibility. Nomos, Baden-Baden 2014, ISBN 978-3-84871-257-1 .
  • Legal protection in Hellenistic Egypt. CH Beck, Munich 2018, ISBN 978-3-406-71906-6 .
  • As editor with Oliver Brupbacher, Jana Osterkamp, ​​Tilmann Röder, Stefan Ruppert and David Sörgel: Remembering and Forgetting. Remembering and Forgetting . Peter Lang, Munich 2007, ISBN 978-3-89975-595-4 .
  • Migrants in court: the debate about ancient conflict of laws from the perspective of international private law and European standardization of private law. In: Patrick Singer , Rodney Ast (editor): Minorities and Migration in the Greco-Roman World. Political, legal, religious and cultural aspects. Schöningh, Paderborn 2016, ISBN 978-3-506-76635-9 .
  • As editor with Guido Pfeifer : Extrajudicial conflict resolution in antiquity. Examples from three millennia. Max Planck Institute for European Legal History, Frankfurt am Main 2017, ISBN 978-3-944773-08-7 .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b c d Karl-Heinz Ziegler : Nadine Grotkamp, ​​Völkerrecht im Prinzipat. Possibility and diffusion . Review. In: Journal of the Savigny Foundation for Legal History . Romance Department, Volume 128, Issue 1, Pages 578–587, ISSN (Online) 2304-4934, ISSN (Print) 0323-4096, doi: 10.7767 / zrgra.2011.128.1.578 (accessed via De Gruyter Online)
  2. Papyrus Collection , jura.uni-frankfurt.de
  3. http://www.zlv-info.de/index.php?id=28
  4. 8th annual meeting of the Collegium Young Romanists . Official website of the University of Trier . Retrieved May 22, 2018.
  5. ^ Günter Poethke: Actes du 26e Congrès international de papyrologie . In: Archives for Papyrus Research and Related Areas, Volume 59, Issue 1, Pages 186–193, ISSN (Online) 1867-1551, ISSN (Print) 0066-6459, doi: 10.1515 / apf.2013.59.1.186 . (accessed via De Gruyter Online)
  6. Tanja Johannsen: XVIII. Forum of Young Legal Historians / Association of Young Legal Historians AYLH in Vienna 2012 . In: Journal of the Savigny Foundation for Legal History . Romance Department, Volume 130, Issue 1, Pages 803-807, ISSN (Online) 2304-4934, ISSN (Print) 0323-4096, doi: 10.7767 / zrgra.2013.130.1.803 (accessed via De Gruyter Online)