@article{oai:oiu.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000558, author = {奥, 正嗣 and オク, マサツグ and Oku, Masatsugu}, issue = {1}, journal = {国際研究論叢 : 大阪国際大学紀要, OIU journal of international studies}, month = {Oct}, note = {P(論文), This paper examines the history of the Austrian Constitution between 1938 and 1945.  In this period, the Austrian Republic was occupied by Hitler’s Third Reich, and became one state (the State of Austria: das Land Österreich), and later the districts (Alps-Danube: die Alpen-und Donaureichsgaue) of the Third Reich.  As a result, Austria was ruled by German law. German Nazi law denied parliamentary democracy, federalism, the principle of legality, and the plural political party system. In this way, the historical-traditional Austria experienced great hardships through the shift from Austrian law to German law, the reorganization of some states (Länder) in previous Austria Republic, and the control of a German governor.  Nevertheless, by making a series of laws in 1945, Austria restored the constitution, laws, ordinances, and public authority structure of the previous Austrian Republic.}, pages = {57--76}, title = {ドイツ占領下のオーストリア(1938年〜1945年)─オーストリア州、アルプス・ドナウ大管区─}, volume = {28}, year = {2014}, yomi = {オク, マサツグ} }