Ernst Rabel
Ernst Rabel (January 28, 1874 – September 7, 1955) was an
Austrian-born scholar of
Roman law,
German private law, and
comparative law, who, as the founding director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Foreign and International Private Law, in
Berlin, achieved international recognition in the period
between the World Wars, before being forced into retirement under the
Nazi regime, and emigrating to the
United States, in 1939. In the field of
comparative law his methodological perspectives, particularly as articulated and disseminated by his students, including , , and
Max Rheinstein, were influential in the development of the "functional" or "function/context" methodology that became standard in Europe, the United States, and elsewhere in the world, in the post-
World War II era. His work in
Germany in the 1930s in the area of the law of the sale of goods provided a model for later postwar efforts to develop a uniform world-wide
sales law.
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