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The Purge of Lawyers after the Breakdown of the East German Communist Regime

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 December 2018

Abstract

When in East Germany communist rule broke down, West Germans stood ready to take over. The end of communism also meant the end of the German Democratic Republic state; unification came as unconditional surrender to the western Federal Republic of Germany. The purge of the former regime's leaders therefore became intertwined with the West German takeover. With the takeover came Western politicians, managers, and professionals, forcing East Germans to compete fur jobs and influence. Opportunistic strategies with regard to the future buildup thus mixed with the desires for revenge and justice toward those responsible for the communist past. In this article I focus especially on the screening of the East German legal profession for reemployment in the unified Germany. In the West German tradition the legal profession forms the core of the civil services. In communist states lawyers had remained relatively marginal to the center of political power. Thus Western perceptions of the role of law account for the demise of the East German legal profession. That demise is taking place at a time when the Western regime is in need of many more legally trained people than ever worked in East Germany.

Type
Symposium: Law and Lustration: Righting the Wrongs of the Past
Copyright
Copyright © American Bar Foundation, 1995 

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References

1 “Nomenklatura” refers to the “system of patronage to senior positions in the bureaucracy of the Soviet Union and some other Communist states, controlled by committees at various levels of the Communist Party.”The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (3d ed. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1992).Google Scholar

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3 Unlike other parts of East Germany, which formed their own state (Land) within the federation, East Berlin joined with West Berlin to become one state. As the eastern part was considerably smaller than the western part, politics were dominated by West Berliners, as was typical of in the entire Federal Republic.Google Scholar

4 Rechtsstaat is often translated as “rule of law,” but as the German concept implies more substantive notions and the English-American tradition more of the procedural notions of “due process,” it is perhaps best to leave the term untranslated.Google Scholar

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23 Cf. Heiner Sauer & Hans-Otto Plumeyer, Der Salzgitter Report (Esslingen: Bechtle Verlag, 1991).Google Scholar

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25 Compare the ratio at the time of our comparison of 900 West German attorneys and 294 judges per million population to 320 U.S. lawyers and about 80 judges per million population.Google Scholar

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