Ruppert, Stefan: Recht hält jungZur Entstehung der Jugend aus rechtshistorischer Sicht: Deutschland im langen 19. Jahrhundert (1800–1919)
Law keeps you young. Law makes you old. These striking phrases contain an assumption: namely that age is the result of a social definition to which law contributes significantly. Age limits and age-specific rules determine when we, as adults, are endowed with all civil rights. They specify when we must go to school and when we need to retire. The legally determined age assigns us a social role at all times. It spells out duties, freedoms, protective regulations, and behavioral expectations, as they become tangible in school law, military law, juvenile criminal law, and electoral law, but also in laws against children and youth work. The legal emergence of youth as a moratorium on maturity will be recounted in this book, primarily using the example of Prussia during the long 19th century.
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