State administration

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The term state leadership relates to the heads of a state and is understood today primarily in the terms that Ernst Friesenhahn gave him:

"The state leadership, however, is, to a certain extent, at the disposal of the government and parliament." (Emphasis in the original)

Although Friesenhahn made this statement in relation to domestic affairs, it is now considered to be correct in relation to external violence as well.

The term state management itself is older and was used, for example, in 1932 by Johannes Heckel in the Handbuch des Deutschen Staatsrechts, but has a tradition that goes back much longer.

Individual evidence

  1. Ernst Friesenhahn: Parliament and Government in the Modern State (Report), in: VVDStRL , Vol. 16 (1958), p. 37 f. = Ders., Parliament and Government in the Modern State , in: Theo Stammen (Ed.): Structural Change of the Modern Government , Darmstadt 1967, p. 143.
  2. See Streinz , in: Sachs , Basic Law Commentary, Art. 59, Rn 25.
  3. ^ Heckel, in: Gerhard Anschütz / Richard Thoma (eds.): Handbuch des Deutschen Staatsrechts , Vol. II, Tübingen 1932, p. 388.