Wolfgang March

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wolfgang March (born April 7, 1955 in Augsburg ) is a German law scholar and professor at the University of Rostock .

After graduating from high school in 1974, March did two years of military service. In 1976 he took up the study of law, modern history and philosophy at the University of Munich ; In 1979 he moved to the University of Tübingen , where he passed the first state examination in 1981. After completing the rest of his studies, he worked from 1983 to 1996 first as a research assistant , then as a research assistant and finally as a research assistant at the chair for public law of Wolfgang Graf Vitzthum at the University of Tübingen. During this time he was in 1988 with a constitutional thesis "breaks federal law state law" doctorate ; In 1996 his habilitation followed with a constitutional work on the "dictatorship of the Reich President". After substituting professorships at the Universities of Düsseldorf (Chair for Public Law), Freiburg (Chair for Public Law, Canon Law and Philosophy of Law) and Rostock (Chair for Public Law and Philosophy of Law), he became a full professor at the Faculty of Law at the University of Rostock in 1998 , where he has been since then holds the chair for public law and constitutional history .

Publications (selection)

  • Federal law breaks state law. A constitutional investigation into Article 31 of the Basic Law , dissertation, University of Tübingen 1988.
  • The development of the constitution in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania , in: JöR NF, Vol. 54 (2006), pp. 175–306.
  • A certain immortality: Carl Sartorius (1865–1945) and Felix Stoerk (1851–1908) , in: Joachim Lege (Hrsg.): Greifswald - Spiegel der deutschen Rechtswissenschaft 1815–1945, Tübingen 2009, pp. 223–252.

Web links