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Max Huber: A Portrait in OutlineDaniel Thurer 1
Abstract
The introductory chapter should be written last – that was what Richard Baxter taught us, his students. It is the best way to provide a general overview and to highlight the main points of the other chapters. Dietrich Schindler, Jost Delbrück, Oliver Diggelmann, Daniel Khan, Ole Spiermann and Yves Sandoz have each shed light on Max Huber as a person and on his work. This introduction seeks to fill in certain traits in the portrait of Max Huber that could not be included in the individual studies. I also discuss what Max Huber's work means to us in today's world.
1 Prof. Dr. iur. Dr. rer.publ.h.c., LL.M. (Cambridge), Chair of International Law, European Law, Public Law and Comparative Constitutional Law and Director of the Institute for International Law and Comparative Constitutional Law at the University of Zurich. The author is also a member of the International Committee of the Red Cross; the views expressed here are, however, his own. * The free viewer (Acrobat Reader) for PDF file is available at the Adobe Systems |
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