Contributions to international law and his participation in the creation of the League of Nations
Otfried Nippold (May 21, 1864 – July 27, 1938) was a German–Swiss jurist, pacifist and internationalist.[1] He was also an academic and a prolific author.
On his return to Europe on the conclusion of his three-year contract, he worked as a lawyer in Thun and Bern and acquired Swiss citizenship in 1905. The same year, he passed his habilitation in international law at the University of Bern. After a brief stay in Frankfurt he returned to Switzerland after the outbreak of the First World War.
Following the war, he became President of the High Court of the Territory of the Saar Basin in Saarlouis in 1921.[6] In 1927, he had become a professor of the University of Bern, and returned to Switzerland to assume his seat in 1934. He died in 1938 in Bern.
Nippold was one of the first to propose a league of nations. His book, Development of International Law After the World War, was drafted during the First World War. In this text, Nippold argued that the conflict created a need for a radical reinterpretation of the law of war. He reasoned that modern war cannot be given the character of a legal institution
because it is really a negation of law; and therefore, war itself is an illustration of "self-help" on the part of the aggressor.[7]
Nippold was a leader in the slow transformation of treaties from bilateral alliances or trade agreements to more "normative" instruments; and in the 20th century, there came to be a perceived distinction between regular treaties and "law-making" or "quasi-legislative" conventions. In 1894, Nippold summarized a point of view which would continue to evolve: "International treaties in their totality will be the Law-book of international law."[8]
^Nakai, p. 52; Schenk, Paul-Christian. (1997). Der deutsche Anteil an der Gestaltung des modernen japanischen Rechts- und Verfassungswesens: deutsche Rechtsberater im Japan der Meiji-Zeit, pp. 249, 338.
Nippold, Otfried. (1923). The Development of International Law after the World War. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 3064086
Schenk, Paul-Christian. (1997). Der deutsche Anteil an der Gestaltung des modernen japanischen Rechts- und Verfassungswesens: deutsche Rechtsberater im Japan der Meiji-Zeit. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag. ISBN978-3-515-06903-8; OCLC37296432(in German)