Hugo Krabbe | |
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Born | Leiden, Netherlands | 3 February 1857
Died | 4 February 1936 Leiden, Netherlands | (aged 79)
Occupation | Professor |
Years active | 1894–1927 |
Academic background | |
Education | Leiden University |
Thesis | De burgerlijke staatsdienst in Nederland (1883) |
Academic work | |
Discipline | Public law |
Institutions | University of Groningen Leiden University |
Notable works |
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Notable ideas |
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Hugo Krabbe (3 February 1857 – 4 February 1936) was a Dutch legal philosopher and writer on public law. Known for his contributions to the theory of sovereignty and the state, he is regarded as a precursor of Hans Kelsen. Also Krabbe identified the state with the law and argued that state law and international law are parts of a single normative system, but contrary to Kelsen he conceived the identity between state and law as the outcome of an evolutionary process. Krabbe maintained that the binding force of the law is founded on the "legal consciousness" of mankind: a normative feeling inherent to human psychology. His work is expressive of the progressive and cosmopolitan ideals of interwar internationalism, and his notion of "sovereignty of law" stirred up much controversy in the legal scholarship of the time.