gorący zwolennik i szermierz pokoju Autorytety ► "Odszedł gorący zwolennik i szermierz pokoju"-za... more gorący zwolennik i szermierz pokoju Autorytety ► "Odszedł gorący zwolennik i szermierz pokoju"-zareagował na wieść o jego śmierci kolega z Wydziału Prawa i Umiejętności Politycznych we Lwowie, Ernest Till. Było to w roku 1915, w czasie jakże niespokojnym, co dzień obfitującym w doniesienia o śmieci setek... Władysław Maliniak zauważył, że "śmierć ta przeszła, jakby przez ogół niepostrzeżona, a fakt to tym dziwniejszy, że zmarłemu profesorowi należy się wdzięczna i trwała pamięć". Niestety, nie miał szczęścia do tej pamięci. Dziwi tym bardziej, że podejmowane przez Gustawa Roszkowskiego tematy badawcze nie dezaktualizowały się, a często wybiegały w przyszłość. Dlaczego więc popadł w zapomnienie?
An article about the contribution of the Faculty of Law of the Jan Kazimierz University in Lwów (... more An article about the contribution of the Faculty of Law of the Jan Kazimierz University in Lwów (now: Lviv) to the development of international criminal law, and in particular about Rafał Lemki, Hersch Lauterpacht, Louis B. Sohn, Jan Karski.
In the fourth installment of the Lexicon, we recall the figure and achievements of the scientist ... more In the fourth installment of the Lexicon, we recall the figure and achievements of the scientist and practitioner of law, whom Fryderyk Zoll the younger considered the most outstanding Polish lawyer of the first half of the 20th century. Szymon Rundstein was an excellently educated Warsaw lawyer, who perfectly combined law studies with practice. He is considered one of the founders of the Polish treaty law. He was an outstanding negotiator of international treaties, participant in the unification and legislative work of the League of Nations, at the Academy of International Law, a judge at the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague, and at the same time a respected theoretician of law, who presented original concepts of the norm or spoke about the role of judicial decisions. He combined his work in the government administration with the attorney's practice and teaching at the Free Polish University in Warsaw. He and his family were murdered by the Germans during the Holocaust.
Keywords: Szymon Rundstein, history of Polish law, international policy of the Second Polish Republic, theory of law, interpretation of law, civil law.
In 1926, Raphael Lemkin published a summary of Bialik's work entitled Noah and Marynka in Polish.... more In 1926, Raphael Lemkin published a summary of Bialik's work entitled Noah and Marynka in Polish. This fact is little known in the literature. Lemkin compared Bialik and his work to Adam Mickiewicz. The reprint of Lemkin's study was preceded by an extensive preface about Lemkin in Lwów (now Lviv) in 1921-1926.
"Słownik Biograficzny Adwokatów Polskich", t. 3, 2018
Artykuł biograficzny poświecony adwokatowi Stanisławowi Mikke (1947-2010) - społęcznikowmi, zaang... more Artykuł biograficzny poświecony adwokatowi Stanisławowi Mikke (1947-2010) - społęcznikowmi, zaangażowanemu w odkrywaniu prawdy o zbrodni katyńskiej, cenionemu adwokatowi, redaktorowi naczelnemu "Palestry" , zastępczy przewodniczącego Rady Ochrony Pamięci Walk i Męczeństwa
Głos Prawa. Przegląd Prawniczy Allerhanda - The Voice of Law. Allerhand Law Review, 2019
Adam Redzik, Anzelm Lutwak and his "Voice"
Article dedicated to Anzelm Lutwak (1877-1942), the... more Adam Redzik, Anzelm Lutwak and his "Voice"
Article dedicated to Anzelm Lutwak (1877-1942), the founder of the “Voice of Law” and the esteemed barrister from Lwów. He was a typical person for the Lviv intelligentsia of that period; a representative of assimilated Jewish intelligentsia. Although he identified with the Polish character, he did not stop being a Jew as well. He held a double identity, as many similar to him, which also includes Maurycy Allerhand. At the beginning, he was associated with the Zionism movement, but with the passing of time he reoriented himself towards liberal, solidarity and socialist ideas. He possessed unique organizational and creative abilities, while his perceptive language often echoed in the fight for the independent Bar association, equal in the whole country. It was he who established the barrister’s journal “Palestra” in 1910, and in 1924 set up ‘The Voice of Law’, one of the more important legal magazines in the Second Republic of Poland, which he edited until the outbreak of war. The magazine’s characteristic feature was an explicit author’s rite – a mark of the founder and the editor.
Keywords: the Bar, legal journals, legal science, Second Republic of Poland, Lwów, Anzelm Lutwark
Głos Prawa. Przegląd Prawniczy Allerhanda - The Voice of Law. Allerhand Law Review, 2019
Adam Redzik, Lexicon of Polish Lawyers and Economists: Raphael Lemkin – 2019 patron of “The Voice... more Adam Redzik, Lexicon of Polish Lawyers and Economists: Raphael Lemkin – 2019 patron of “The Voice of Law”
This section presents figures of the most distinguished Polish lawyers and economists. The aim is to provide a possibly broad depiction of their scientific, organizational, didactic and social achievements. In 2018, the patron of “ The Voice of Law” is Raphael Lemkin.
Głos Prawa. Allerhanda Przegląd Prawniczy - The Voice of Law. Allerhand Law Review, 2018
The women’s path to the barrister’s profession. A timeline.
This article was written on occasio... more The women’s path to the barrister’s profession. A timeline.
This article was written on occasion of the centenary of political rights of women in Poland. On 28 November 1918 Józef Piłsudski, First Marshall of Poland, signed a decree on the electoral system to the Polish Parliament (Sejm Ustawodawczy), which conferred equal political rights to men and women. Soon after first women became Members of Parliament. Poland became one of the first European countries which equated political rights of all citizens. In the second part of the article it is shown, in the form of a calendar with illustrations, how the women’s path to the legal profession has evolved since the second half of the 19th century (especially to the Bar) in the United States and especially in Poland.
Keywords: women suffrage in Poland, law studies of women, history of the access of women to the legal profession
gorący zwolennik i szermierz pokoju Autorytety ► "Odszedł gorący zwolennik i szermierz pokoju"-za... more gorący zwolennik i szermierz pokoju Autorytety ► "Odszedł gorący zwolennik i szermierz pokoju"-zareagował na wieść o jego śmierci kolega z Wydziału Prawa i Umiejętności Politycznych we Lwowie, Ernest Till. Było to w roku 1915, w czasie jakże niespokojnym, co dzień obfitującym w doniesienia o śmieci setek... Władysław Maliniak zauważył, że "śmierć ta przeszła, jakby przez ogół niepostrzeżona, a fakt to tym dziwniejszy, że zmarłemu profesorowi należy się wdzięczna i trwała pamięć". Niestety, nie miał szczęścia do tej pamięci. Dziwi tym bardziej, że podejmowane przez Gustawa Roszkowskiego tematy badawcze nie dezaktualizowały się, a często wybiegały w przyszłość. Dlaczego więc popadł w zapomnienie?
An article about the contribution of the Faculty of Law of the Jan Kazimierz University in Lwów (... more An article about the contribution of the Faculty of Law of the Jan Kazimierz University in Lwów (now: Lviv) to the development of international criminal law, and in particular about Rafał Lemki, Hersch Lauterpacht, Louis B. Sohn, Jan Karski.
In the fourth installment of the Lexicon, we recall the figure and achievements of the scientist ... more In the fourth installment of the Lexicon, we recall the figure and achievements of the scientist and practitioner of law, whom Fryderyk Zoll the younger considered the most outstanding Polish lawyer of the first half of the 20th century. Szymon Rundstein was an excellently educated Warsaw lawyer, who perfectly combined law studies with practice. He is considered one of the founders of the Polish treaty law. He was an outstanding negotiator of international treaties, participant in the unification and legislative work of the League of Nations, at the Academy of International Law, a judge at the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague, and at the same time a respected theoretician of law, who presented original concepts of the norm or spoke about the role of judicial decisions. He combined his work in the government administration with the attorney's practice and teaching at the Free Polish University in Warsaw. He and his family were murdered by the Germans during the Holocaust.
Keywords: Szymon Rundstein, history of Polish law, international policy of the Second Polish Republic, theory of law, interpretation of law, civil law.
In 1926, Raphael Lemkin published a summary of Bialik's work entitled Noah and Marynka in Polish.... more In 1926, Raphael Lemkin published a summary of Bialik's work entitled Noah and Marynka in Polish. This fact is little known in the literature. Lemkin compared Bialik and his work to Adam Mickiewicz. The reprint of Lemkin's study was preceded by an extensive preface about Lemkin in Lwów (now Lviv) in 1921-1926.
"Słownik Biograficzny Adwokatów Polskich", t. 3, 2018
Artykuł biograficzny poświecony adwokatowi Stanisławowi Mikke (1947-2010) - społęcznikowmi, zaang... more Artykuł biograficzny poświecony adwokatowi Stanisławowi Mikke (1947-2010) - społęcznikowmi, zaangażowanemu w odkrywaniu prawdy o zbrodni katyńskiej, cenionemu adwokatowi, redaktorowi naczelnemu "Palestry" , zastępczy przewodniczącego Rady Ochrony Pamięci Walk i Męczeństwa
Głos Prawa. Przegląd Prawniczy Allerhanda - The Voice of Law. Allerhand Law Review, 2019
Adam Redzik, Anzelm Lutwak and his "Voice"
Article dedicated to Anzelm Lutwak (1877-1942), the... more Adam Redzik, Anzelm Lutwak and his "Voice"
Article dedicated to Anzelm Lutwak (1877-1942), the founder of the “Voice of Law” and the esteemed barrister from Lwów. He was a typical person for the Lviv intelligentsia of that period; a representative of assimilated Jewish intelligentsia. Although he identified with the Polish character, he did not stop being a Jew as well. He held a double identity, as many similar to him, which also includes Maurycy Allerhand. At the beginning, he was associated with the Zionism movement, but with the passing of time he reoriented himself towards liberal, solidarity and socialist ideas. He possessed unique organizational and creative abilities, while his perceptive language often echoed in the fight for the independent Bar association, equal in the whole country. It was he who established the barrister’s journal “Palestra” in 1910, and in 1924 set up ‘The Voice of Law’, one of the more important legal magazines in the Second Republic of Poland, which he edited until the outbreak of war. The magazine’s characteristic feature was an explicit author’s rite – a mark of the founder and the editor.
Keywords: the Bar, legal journals, legal science, Second Republic of Poland, Lwów, Anzelm Lutwark
Głos Prawa. Przegląd Prawniczy Allerhanda - The Voice of Law. Allerhand Law Review, 2019
Adam Redzik, Lexicon of Polish Lawyers and Economists: Raphael Lemkin – 2019 patron of “The Voice... more Adam Redzik, Lexicon of Polish Lawyers and Economists: Raphael Lemkin – 2019 patron of “The Voice of Law”
This section presents figures of the most distinguished Polish lawyers and economists. The aim is to provide a possibly broad depiction of their scientific, organizational, didactic and social achievements. In 2018, the patron of “ The Voice of Law” is Raphael Lemkin.
Głos Prawa. Allerhanda Przegląd Prawniczy - The Voice of Law. Allerhand Law Review, 2018
The women’s path to the barrister’s profession. A timeline.
This article was written on occasio... more The women’s path to the barrister’s profession. A timeline.
This article was written on occasion of the centenary of political rights of women in Poland. On 28 November 1918 Józef Piłsudski, First Marshall of Poland, signed a decree on the electoral system to the Polish Parliament (Sejm Ustawodawczy), which conferred equal political rights to men and women. Soon after first women became Members of Parliament. Poland became one of the first European countries which equated political rights of all citizens. In the second part of the article it is shown, in the form of a calendar with illustrations, how the women’s path to the legal profession has evolved since the second half of the 19th century (especially to the Bar) in the United States and especially in Poland.
Keywords: women suffrage in Poland, law studies of women, history of the access of women to the legal profession
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Papers by Adam Redzik
Keywords: Szymon Rundstein, history of Polish law, international policy of the Second Polish Republic, theory of law, interpretation of law, civil law.
Article dedicated to Anzelm Lutwak (1877-1942), the founder of the “Voice of Law” and the esteemed barrister from Lwów. He was a typical person for the Lviv intelligentsia of that period; a representative of assimilated Jewish intelligentsia. Although he identified with the Polish character, he did not stop being a Jew as well. He held a double identity, as many similar to him, which also includes Maurycy Allerhand. At the beginning, he was associated with the Zionism movement, but with the passing of time he reoriented himself towards liberal, solidarity and socialist ideas. He possessed unique organizational and creative abilities, while his perceptive language often echoed in the fight for the independent Bar association, equal in the whole country. It was he who established the barrister’s journal “Palestra” in 1910, and in 1924 set up ‘The Voice of Law’, one of the more important legal magazines in the Second Republic of Poland, which he edited until the outbreak of war. The magazine’s characteristic feature was an explicit author’s rite – a mark of the founder and the editor.
Keywords: the Bar, legal journals, legal science, Second Republic of Poland, Lwów, Anzelm Lutwark
This section presents figures of the most distinguished Polish lawyers and economists. The aim is to provide a possibly broad depiction of their scientific, organizational, didactic and social achievements. In 2018, the patron of “ The Voice of Law” is Raphael Lemkin.
This article was written on occasion of the centenary of political rights of women in Poland. On 28 November 1918 Józef Piłsudski, First Marshall of Poland, signed a decree on the electoral system to the Polish Parliament (Sejm Ustawodawczy), which conferred equal political rights to men and women. Soon after first women became Members of Parliament. Poland became one of the first European countries which equated political rights of all citizens. In the second part of the article it is shown, in the form of a calendar with illustrations, how the women’s path to the legal profession has evolved since the second half of the 19th century (especially to the Bar) in the United States and especially in Poland.
Keywords: women suffrage in Poland, law studies of women, history of the access of women to the legal profession
Keywords: Szymon Rundstein, history of Polish law, international policy of the Second Polish Republic, theory of law, interpretation of law, civil law.
Article dedicated to Anzelm Lutwak (1877-1942), the founder of the “Voice of Law” and the esteemed barrister from Lwów. He was a typical person for the Lviv intelligentsia of that period; a representative of assimilated Jewish intelligentsia. Although he identified with the Polish character, he did not stop being a Jew as well. He held a double identity, as many similar to him, which also includes Maurycy Allerhand. At the beginning, he was associated with the Zionism movement, but with the passing of time he reoriented himself towards liberal, solidarity and socialist ideas. He possessed unique organizational and creative abilities, while his perceptive language often echoed in the fight for the independent Bar association, equal in the whole country. It was he who established the barrister’s journal “Palestra” in 1910, and in 1924 set up ‘The Voice of Law’, one of the more important legal magazines in the Second Republic of Poland, which he edited until the outbreak of war. The magazine’s characteristic feature was an explicit author’s rite – a mark of the founder and the editor.
Keywords: the Bar, legal journals, legal science, Second Republic of Poland, Lwów, Anzelm Lutwark
This section presents figures of the most distinguished Polish lawyers and economists. The aim is to provide a possibly broad depiction of their scientific, organizational, didactic and social achievements. In 2018, the patron of “ The Voice of Law” is Raphael Lemkin.
This article was written on occasion of the centenary of political rights of women in Poland. On 28 November 1918 Józef Piłsudski, First Marshall of Poland, signed a decree on the electoral system to the Polish Parliament (Sejm Ustawodawczy), which conferred equal political rights to men and women. Soon after first women became Members of Parliament. Poland became one of the first European countries which equated political rights of all citizens. In the second part of the article it is shown, in the form of a calendar with illustrations, how the women’s path to the legal profession has evolved since the second half of the 19th century (especially to the Bar) in the United States and especially in Poland.
Keywords: women suffrage in Poland, law studies of women, history of the access of women to the legal profession