Following his graduation from the
gymnasium in 1958, Korinek enrolled at the
University of Vienna to study
law, receiving his
doctorate in 1963. He spent the next year working as a trainee at various Viennese courts. In 1964, he went to work as an in-house legal consultant for the
Austrian Economic Chamber. In addition to his day job in the bureaucracy, Korinek continued to pursue an academic career. In 1970, he submitted his
habilitation thesis to the Faculty of Legal and Political Science () at the
University of Salzburg. In 1973, he left the Chamber to accept an appointment to full professor of public law () at the
University of Graz. After three years in Graz, Korinek returned to the capital to become a professor at the
Vienna University of Economics and Business, a position he held until he moved on to the
University of Vienna in 1995. Starting in 1997, he also taught at the
Danube University Krems. He also served on the boards of directors of a number of publicly traded companies and
NGOs, most notably the
Uniqa Insurance Group and the
ERSTE Foundation. In 1998, he was invited to join the
Austrian Academy of Sciences. In early 2003, the cabinet of then-
Chancellor Wolfgang Schüssel launched the Austria Convention (), a conference of legal scholars and public intellectuals tasked with drafting a new constitution for Austria. The existing constitution, exceptionally bulky and difficult to navigate, had been posing serious technical challenges to legislators and constitutional justices for decades. The Convention was charged with exploring reform. Korinek was a member of the Convention from its launch to its conclusion in 2005. Effective May 2008, Korinek retired from the court, citing health reasons. Over the course of his career, Korinek wrote several books and more than 250 scholarly articles. == Death and legacy ==