Hersch Lauterpacht
Sir Hersch Lauterpacht | |
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Judge of theInternational Court of Justice | |
In office 1955–1960 | |
Preceded by | The Lord McNair |
Succeeded by | SirGerald Fitzmaurice |
Whewell Professor of International Law | |
In office 1938–1955 | |
Preceded by | The Lord McNair |
Succeeded by | Sir Robert Jennings |
Personal details | |
Born | Hersch Lauterpacht 16 August 1897 Żółkiew,Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria,Austria-Hungary (modern-day Zhovkva,Lviv Oblast,Ukraine) |
Died | 8 May 1960 London,United Kingdom | (aged 62)
Academic background | |
Alma mater | University of Lemberg London School of Economics(LLD) |
Thesis | Private law analogies in international law with special reference to international arbitration(1925) |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Public international law |
Institutions | University of Cambridge |
Notable works | The Function of Law in the International Community(1933) An International Bill of the Rights of Man(1945) Recognition in International Law(1947) The Development of International Law by the International Court(1958) |
Sir Hersch LauterpachtQC(16 August 1897 – 8 May 1960) was a British international lawyer, human rights activist, and judge at theInternational Court of Justice.
Biography[edit]
Hersch Lauterpacht was born on 16 August 1897 to aJewishfamily in the small town ofŻółkiew,in theAustro-Hungarian Empire,nearLemberg(nowLviv), the capital ofEast Galicia.In 1911 his family moved to Lemberg. In 1915 he enrolled in the law school of theUniversity of Lemberg;it is not clear whether he graduated. Lauterpacht himself later wrote that he had not been able to take the final examinations "because the university has been closed to Jews in Eastern Galicia". He then moved to Vienna, and then London, where he became an international lawyer. He obtained a PhD degree from theLondon School of Economicsin 1925, writing his dissertation onPrivate law analogies in international law,[1]which was published in 1927.[2][3]
His 1933 bookThe Function of Law in the International Communityhas been characterized as arguably his most influential.[4]
By 1937 he had written several books on international law. He assisted in the prosecution of the defendants at the Nuremberg trials - helping to draft the British prosecutor's (Hartley Shawcross) speech.[5]He was a member of the British delegation in two International Court of Justice cases: theCorfu Channel case (1948)and theAnglo-Iranian Oil Co. case (1951).[6]
Lauterpacht was a member of the United Nations'International Law Commissionfrom 1952 to 1954 and a Judge of theInternational Court of Justicefrom 1955 to 1960. In the words of former ICJ PresidentStephen M. Schwebel,Judge Sir Hersch Lauterpacht's "attainments are unsurpassed by any international lawyer of this century [...] he taught and wrote with unmatched distinction".[7]Hersch's writings and (concurring and dissenting) opinions continue, nearly 50 years after his death, to be cited frequently in briefs, judgments, and advisory opinions of the World Court. He famously said "international law is at thevanishing pointof law ".[8]
TheLauterpacht Centre for International Lawat theUniversity of Cambridgeis named after him and his son, SirElihu Lauterpacht,CBE, QC, who founded the centre and was its first director;[9]Elihu remained actively involved in its work as Director Emeritus and Honorary Professor of International Law until his death in February 2017.[citation needed]
Samuel Moynhas suggested that Hersch was one of the few international lawyers actively campaigning forhuman rightsin the late 1940s, and that he had "denounced theUniversal Declarationas a shameful defeat of the ideals it grandly proclaimed ".[10]In the aftermath of the Holocaust Lauterpacht's thinking also included the question how this unpreceded event could be properly met by an international law, which was based on established rules and precedents. When asked about the possibilities of the newly established state of Israel to claim citizenship for deceased Jewish victims of the Holocaust, Lauterpacht ambivalently stated that although this was not possible according to the present state of international law, it would only be an extraordinary reaction to an unprecedented event in history.[11]
In 1948, Lauterpacht was asked byYishuvdiplomats to consider the legal basis for Israel's independence or write a declaration of independence for Israel. By May 1948, Lauterpacht had produced a two-part document that amounted to a declaration of independence. Some of Lauterpacht's draft was incorporated into what would ultimately become the ultimate draft ofIsrael's Declaration of Independence.[12]
Personal life[edit]
He was married to Rachel Lauterpacht and father ofElihu Lauterpacht.[12]
Major works[edit]
- Private Law Sources and Analogies of International Law,London, 1927;
- The Function of Law in the International Community,Oxford, 1933;
- An International Bill of the Rights of Man,Oxford, 1945;
- Recognition in International Law,Cambridge, 1947;[13]
- The Development of International Law by the International Court,London, 1958;
- Oppenheim's International Law,Vol. 1, 8th ed., 1958;
- Sir Gerald Fitzmaurice,Hersch Lauterpacht – The Scholar as Judge,Part I. 37 British Yearbook of International Law 1-72, 1961; Part II, 38 British Yearbook of International Law 1-84, 1962; Part III, 39 British Yearbook of International Law 133–189, 1963
- Annual Digest and Reports of Public International Law Cases,Vols. 1–16, subsequently continued as International Law Reports, Vols. 17–24
- International Law – The Collected Papers of Hersch Lauterpacht,Vol.5, Edited by Elihu Lauterpacht (Cambridge 2004)as reviewed by H.E. Former ICJ PresidentStephen M. Schwebel,in99 American Journal of International Law 726-729 (2005)
- The Life of Hersch Lauterpacht(Cambridge November 2010)byElihu LauterpachtandILR Announcementasreviewed by H.E. Former ICJ President Schwebel
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^Lauterpacht, Hersch (29 December 1926).Private law analogies in international law(phd).Archivedfrom the original on 6 May 2021.Retrieved1 February2021– via etheses.lse.ac.uk.
- ^"Sir Hersch Lauterpacht (1897-1960)".International Judicial Monitor.1(5). 2006.Archivedfrom the original on 5 September 2014.Retrieved15 June2014.
- ^Lauterpacht, Hersch (1926).Private law analogies in international law(PhD). London School of Economics and Political Science.Archivedfrom the original on 6 May 2021.Retrieved5 May2021.
- ^Jessup, Philip C.; Baxter, R. R. (1961)."The Contribution of Sir Hersch Lauterpacht to the Development of International Law".American Journal of International Law.55(1): 97–103.doi:10.2307/2196400.ISSN0002-9300.JSTOR2196400.
- ^Oona Hathaway and Scott J. Shapito The internationalists and their plan to outlaw war pp. 282-4
- ^Rosenne, Shabtai (1961)."Sir Hersch Lauterpacht's Concept of the Task of the International Judge".American Journal of International Law.55(4): 825–862.doi:10.2307/2196270.ISSN0002-9300.JSTOR2196270.
- ^Schwebel, Stephen M. (1987).International Arbitration: Three Salient Problems by Stephen M. Schwebel.Hersch Lauterpacht Memorial Lectures 1987. Cambridge: Grotius Publications. p. xiii.ISBN9780949009029.
- ^Butler, William Elliott, ed. (1991).Control Over Compliance With International Law.Dordecht: Nijhoff. p. 195.ISBN0-7923-1025-X.
- ^"Establishment and Development - Lauterpacht Centre for International Law".Cambridge University. Archived fromthe originalon 12 February 2012.Retrieved28 June2012.
- ^Moyn, Samuel (2014).Human Rights and the Uses of History.New York: Verso.ISBN9781781682630.OCLC858956307.
- ^"»An Unprecedented Act of Homage« | Mimeo".mimeo.dubnow.de.14 October 2021.Archivedfrom the original on 1 December 2021.Retrieved1 December2021.
- ^abZigler, Dov; Rogachevsky, Neil, eds. (2022),"International Law: Herschel Lauterpacht's Draft",Israel's Declaration of Independence: The History and Political Theory of the Nation's Founding Moment,Cambridge University Press, pp. 113–136,doi:10.1017/9781009090841.007,ISBN978-1-316-51477-1,archivedfrom the original on 22 April 2023,retrieved14 December2022
- ^Kunz, Josef L. (1950)."Critical Remarks on Lauterpacht's" Recognition in International Law "".American Journal of International Law.44(4): 713–719.doi:10.2307/2194989.ISSN0002-9300.JSTOR2194989.
Further reading[edit]
- Browning, Christopher R.(24 November 2016)."The Two Different Ways of Looking at Nazi Murder".The New York Review of Books.
Review ofPhilippe Sands,East West Street: On the Origins of "Genocide" and "Crimes Against Humanity",Knopf, 425 pp., $32.50; andChristian Gerlach,The Extermination of the European Jews,Cambridge University Press, 508 pp., $29.99 [paper]),The New York Review of Books,vol. LXIII, no. 18 (24 November 2016), pp. 56–58. Discusses Hersch Lauterpacht's legal concept of "crimes against humanity",contrasted withRafael Lemkin's legal concept of "genocide".All genocides are crimes against humanity, but not all crimes against humanity are genocides; genocides require a higher standard of proof, as they entailintentto destroy a particular group. - Koskenniemi, Martti(2004)."Hersch Lauterpacht (1897–1960)".InBeatson, Jack;Zimmermann, Reinhard(eds.).Jurists Uprooted: German-speaking Émigré Lawyers in Twentieth-century Britain.New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 601–661.doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199270583.001.0001.ISBN0-19-927058-9.
- Marrus, Michael R. (20 November 2015)."Three Roads From Nuremberg".Tablet.
- Sands, Philippe(2016).East West Street.Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
External links[edit]
- Sir Hersch Lauterpacht 1897–1960andLauterpacht Centre's Sitemap
- 25th Lauterpacht Centre Anniversary, Cambridge, 11–12 July 2008andDinner Speechesof Former ICJ PresidentStephen M. Schwebel,current PresidentRosalyn HigginsandSir Elihu Lauterpacht, CBE QC
- Squire Law Library of Eminent Sir Elihu Lauterpacht, CBE QCandConversations with Sir ElihuandHis Family Photographs
- Sir Hersch Lauterpacht, 8 EJIL 1997 No.2
- H.E. Former ICJ PresidentStephen M. Schwebel'sMemories about Sir Herschand8 EJIL 1997 No.2
- Tributes from Hans Kelsen and Lord McNair to Sir Hersch Lauterpacht
- The Theorist as Judge: Hersch Lauterpacht's Concept of the International Judicial Function
- Human Rights and Genocide: The Work of Lauterpacht and Lemkin in Modern International Law
- Shabtai Rosenne, Sir Hersch Lauterpacht's Concept, in Rosenne, An International Law Miscellany, 782–829, 1993
- Sir Elihu Lauterpacht, CBE QCandWho's Who in Public International Law 2007
- TDM Co-Editor Lauterpacht
- The Lauterpacht Centre
- Hersch Lauterpacht Memorial Lectures
- Hersch LauterpachtatFind a Grave
- Portraits of Hersch Lauterpachtat theNational Portrait Gallery, London
- Works by or about Hersch LauterpachtatInternet Archive
- The Papers of Sir Hersch Lauterpachtheld atChurchill Archives Centre
- 1897 births
- 1960 deaths
- People from Zhovkva
- Ukrainian Jews
- 20th-century English judges
- International law scholars
- International Court of Justice judges
- Members of Gray's Inn
- Members of the Institut de Droit International
- Jews from Galicia (Eastern Europe)
- Austrian emigrants to England
- Whewell Professors of International Law
- Naturalised citizens of the United Kingdom
- 20th-century King's Counsel
- Austrian Jews
- British judges of United Nations courts and tribunals
- British people of Ukrainian-Jewish descent
- Ukrainian emigrants to the United Kingdom