Norman Llewellyn Hill

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Norman Llewellyn Hill (also Norman L. Hill , born December 17, 1895 in Afton , Chenango County , New York , United States ; † November 27, 1976 in Berea , Madison County , Kentucky , United States) was an American political scientist .

Life

Family and education

Norman Llewellyn Hill, born in the small town of Afton in the US state of New York , son of Henry Thomas Hill and his wife Virginia, born Taylor, turned to studying political science at Oberlin College after graduating from high school , and in 1917 he acquired the academic degree degree of Bachelor of Arts . After two semesters abroad at the Sorbonne in Paris in 1919, he graduated in 1920 with a Master of Arts . In 1924 he received his doctorate from the University of Wisconsin – Madison to the Doctor of Philosophy .

Norman Llewellyn Hill married Mary Thompson Sherwood on August 30, 1922. From this connection came the daughters Elizabeth Sherwood and Virginia Louise. He died in the late autumn of 1976 at the age of 80.

Professional background

Hill received a position as an instructor in political science at Ohio Wesleyan University in Delaware in 1920 . In the following year he, who had been awarded the International Law Fellowship of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, moved to Denison University in Granville as an instructor in Political Science, in 1922 he left. Upon graduation, Hill took a position as an instructor in political science at Western Reserve University in Cleveland. In 1926, Norman Llewellyn Hill accepted an appointment as Assistant Professor of International Relations at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in Lincoln , in 1927 he was appointed Associate Professor and in 1935 Full Professor . In addition, he acted there since 1948 as a supervisor of the International Relation Courses. In 1935 he was a faculty member for the summer courses at the University of Rochester .

Hill, a recognized expert in international relations , was an elected member of the American Political Science Association , the American Society of International Law , the American Teachers of International Law, and the American Association of University Professors.

Fonts

  • International administration. McGraw-Hill, New York, London, 1931
  • together with Harold W. Stoke: The background of European governments; readings and materials on the organization and operation of the major governments of Europe. Farrar & Rinehart, Inc., New York, 1935
  • Claims to territory in international law and relations. Oxford University Press, London, New York, 1945
  • International relations: documents and readings. Oxford University Press, New York, 1950
  • International organization. Harper, New York, 1952
  • Mr. Secretary of State. in: Studies in political science (Random House), PS43 .. Random House, New York, 1963
  • The new democracy in foreign policy making. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, 1970

literature

  • American Political Science Association, Franklin L. Burdette: Directory of the American Political Science Association. : Volume 3. The Association, Washington, DC., 1953, p. 84.
  • Who's who in the Midwest. : Volume 4. AN Marquis, Chicago, Ill., 1954, p. 359.
  • Who's Who in America: A Biographical Dictionary of Notable Living Men and Women. : Volume 28 (1954-1955). Marquis Who's Who, Chicago, Ill., 1955, p. 1227.
  • Who's Who in America: A Biographical Dictionary of Notable Living Men and Women. : Volume 33 (1964-1965). Marquis Who's Who, Chicago, Ill., 1964, p. 919.
  • American Political Science Association: PS: Political Science & Politics. : Volume 10, Issue 2. The American Political Science Association, Washington, DC., 1977, p. 272.