Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Preface
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface ix
- Acknowledgments xiii
-
Part I. Early Years, 1888-1921: From Apolitical Scholar To Political Theorist
- One. Catholic Heritage, Education, and the State 3
- Two. Political Consciousness, Democracy, and Dictatorship 21
-
Part II. Bonn Years, 1922-1928: The Rise To Intellectual Prominence
- Three. Character and Perspectives of a University Professor 43
- Four. Parliamentarianism vs. Presidential Power 64
- Five. Friend-Enemy Thesis and the Inviolable Constitution 85
-
Part III. Weimar’s Final Crisis, 19229-1933: The Theorist Of The Presidential System
- Six. The Pouvoir Neutre as Defender of the Constitution 107
- Seven. Presidential Government in the Midst of Controversy 127
- Eight. Legality, Neutrality, and Reality: The Constitution, the Court, and the Nazis 145
- Nine. The Constitutional Dilemma and Hitler’s Legal Acquisition of Power 172
-
Part IV. The Nazi Experience, 1993-1947: Collaboration, Repudiation, And Reckoning
- Ten. The “Crown Jurist” of the Third Reich 195
- Eleven. The Purge of an Ideological Deviant 219
- Twelve. The Security of Silence? From Grossraum Theory to Nuremberg 243
- Epilogue 274
- Bibliography 289
- Index 313
- Backmatter 321
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface ix
- Acknowledgments xiii
-
Part I. Early Years, 1888-1921: From Apolitical Scholar To Political Theorist
- One. Catholic Heritage, Education, and the State 3
- Two. Political Consciousness, Democracy, and Dictatorship 21
-
Part II. Bonn Years, 1922-1928: The Rise To Intellectual Prominence
- Three. Character and Perspectives of a University Professor 43
- Four. Parliamentarianism vs. Presidential Power 64
- Five. Friend-Enemy Thesis and the Inviolable Constitution 85
-
Part III. Weimar’s Final Crisis, 19229-1933: The Theorist Of The Presidential System
- Six. The Pouvoir Neutre as Defender of the Constitution 107
- Seven. Presidential Government in the Midst of Controversy 127
- Eight. Legality, Neutrality, and Reality: The Constitution, the Court, and the Nazis 145
- Nine. The Constitutional Dilemma and Hitler’s Legal Acquisition of Power 172
-
Part IV. The Nazi Experience, 1993-1947: Collaboration, Repudiation, And Reckoning
- Ten. The “Crown Jurist” of the Third Reich 195
- Eleven. The Purge of an Ideological Deviant 219
- Twelve. The Security of Silence? From Grossraum Theory to Nuremberg 243
- Epilogue 274
- Bibliography 289
- Index 313
- Backmatter 321