Born in
Lübeck, Radbruch studied law in
Munich,
Leipzig and
Berlin. He passed his first bar exam ("
Staatsexamen") in Berlin in 1901, and the following year he received his doctorate with a dissertation on "The Theory of Adequate Causation". This was followed in 1903 by his qualification to teach criminal law in
Heidelberg. In 1904, he was appointed Professor of criminal and trial law and legal philosophy at Heidelberg. In 1914 he accepted a call to a professorship in
Königsberg, and later that year assumed a professorship at
Kiel. Radbruch was a member of the
Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD), and held a seat in the
Reichstag from 1920 to 1924. In 1921–22 and throughout 1923, he was minister of justice in the cabinets of
Joseph Wirth and
Gustav Stresemann. During his time in office, a number of important laws were implemented, such as those giving women access to the justice system, and, after the assassination of Foreign Minister
Walther Rathenau, the
Law for the Protection of the Republic, which increased the punishments for politically motivated acts of violence and banned organizations that opposed the "constitutional republican form of government" along with their printed matter and meetings. In 1926, Radbruch accepted a renewed call to lecture at Heidelberg where he delivered his inaugural lecture entitled "
Der Mensch im Recht (Law's Image of the Human)" as the newly appointed Professor of Criminal Law on 13 November 1926. After the
Nazi seizure of power in January 1933, Radbruch, as a former
Social Democratic politician, was dismissed from his university post under the terms of the
so-called "Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service" ("Gesetz zur Wiederherstellung des Berufsbeamtentums"), as universities, similar to public bodies, were subject to civil service laws and regulations. Despite the employment ban in
Nazi Germany, during 1935/36 he was able to spend a year in England, at
University College, Oxford. An important practical outcome of this was his book,
Der Geist des englischen Rechts (The Spirit of English Law), although this could be published only in 1945. During the Nazi period, he devoted himself primarily to cultural-historical work. Immediately after the end of the
Second World War in 1945, he resumed his teaching activities, but died in
Heidelberg in 1949 without being able to complete his planned updated edition of his textbook on legal philosophy. In September 1945, Radbruch published a short paper "Fünf Minuten Rechtsphilosophie" (Five Minutes of Legal Philosophy), which was influential in shaping the
jurisprudence of values (
Wertungsjurisprudenz), prevalent in the aftermath of World War II as a reaction against
legal positivism. ==Work==