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A Note on Eugen Ehrlich and the Production of Legal Knowledge - [1998] SydLRev 4; (1998) 20 Sydney Law Review 108 (7578 words) |
 | Ehrlich died in Czernowitz in 1922, struggling with having to teach and write in Romanian[18] and being victimised for having been a proponent of the German elite and their law. |
 | Ehrlich’s famous distinction of “associations” and their “inner order” as the locus where the effects of law can be observed, that is, where “law lives”, is drawn to oppose the traditional legal view that law has effects because it “is there” and that legal propositions have a social effect in their own right. |
 | Ehrlich’s distinction of jurisprudence as legal science demonstrates that he is fully aware of the highly invasive nature of modern law, especially of state law (legislation) and that he recognises this as the result of a historical process of the differentiation of legal work. |
| Eugen Ehrlich | English | Dictionary & Translation by Babylon (218 words) |
 | Eugen Ehrlich (1862 - 1922) was an Austrian legal scholar. |
 | Ehrlich studied law in Vienna, where he taught and practised as a lawyer before returning to Czernowitz to teach at the University there, a bastion of Germanic culture at the eastern edge of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. |
 | Ehrlich is considered as one of the founders of the sociology of law. |