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Otto Gierke, the Corporate Person, and Natural Right


Article # : 16320 

Section : MODERN THOUGHT
Issue Date : 3 / 1989  7,741 Words
Author : Roger Scruton
Roger Scruton is professor of aesthetics at Birkbeck College, University of London. His books include Art and Imagination, Sexual Desire, and Untimely Tracts.

       The reputation of Otto Gierke once stood high. He found British disciples in F.W. Maitland and J.N. Figgis, the first a thinker of great subtlety able to match and even to surpass the complexity and erudition of Gierke's argument; the second an able rhetorician who adapted Gierke's ideas to his own polemical purpose and made a brief but startling commotion in the world of ideas. Like Gierke, Maitland and Figgis were conservatives. However, the liberal constitutionalist Sir Ernest Barker also took an interest in the German jurist, translating (as Maitland had done) an extended section of Das deutsche Genossenschaftsrecht, to which he added his own elegant reflections in an effort to distance himself from what he feared to be the collectivist implications of Gierke's argument. Socialists too--G.D.H. Cole, Harold Laski, and S.G. Hobson--were influenced by Gierke's conceptions, the first finding in them authority for the "guild socialism" that he advocated as a remedy for the decline in social life.
       
        Nor was it only in Britain that Gierke made his mark. His influence was felt in France in the liberal-socialist thought of Leon Duguit and Hugo Krabbe, and in the conservative theory of institutions developed by the jurist Maurice Hauriou. In his native Germany, Gierke was taken up by the nationalists and by the liberal constitutionalist Hugo Preuss.
       
        Yet today Otto Gierke is all but forgotten. His great study of the law of associations--Das deustsche Genosenschaftsrecht, the fourth and last volume of which was published in 1913, when the author was seventy-two years old--is now long out of print, and has never been translated in its entirety. (We owe the two English fragments to Maitland and Barker, whose versions are also out of ... (1993 of 47007 Characters)
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