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This series contains primarily handwritten lecture and research notes, including a number of folders pertaining to the revision of the United Nations Charter.
This series consists of a combination of 5" x 8" note cards and 6" x 9" loose leaf sheets with handwritten notes on various topics, as well as reading notes on books read by Hula.
This series consists primarily of reprints sent to Hula by other authors with some original typescripts and secondary materials. There is a large section on Hans Kelsen (33 folders) as well as a number of reprints and other materials on: Hans Aufricht, Arnold Brecht, Leo Gross, Otto Kirchheimer, Josef L. Kunz, Karl Loewenstein, Hans J. Morgenthau, Egon Schwelb and Kurt von Fritz.
This series contains primarily newspaper clippings and other published materials on various topics, including American government and foreign policy, the Catholic Church, individual countries such as Austria, Germany, Great Britain, the Soviet Union and the United States, International Law, the New School for Social Research, and the United Nations.
This series of pamphlets deals predominantly with the United Nations and issues surrounding the United Nations.
Includes copies of birth certificates, marriage certificate, university documents.
This series contains a number of original documents from Austria, including birth, marriage and university documents, as well as correspondence, documents and several photographs associated with his long career as a member of the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research. Also present are correspondence and documents relating to Hula's Wiedergutmachung (restitution) and Austrian pension claims.
Erich Hula Papers, 1900-1986 22 cubic ft.
This sub-series contains publications and typescripts of articles in German on issues in labor, law, parliamentary reform and economics, written by Hula before his emigration to the United States.
This series contains primarily correspondence dealing with Hula's publications and includes correspondence with publishers, newspapers and periodicals, as well as colleagues. Individuals represented in the correspondence include colleagues at the New School for Social Research, such as Arnold Brecht, Eduard Heimann, Hans Simons and Hans Staudinger, as well as legal scholars and contemporaries such as Leo Gross, Hans Kelsen, Hans J. Morgenthau, Kurt Riezler, and Kurt von Fritz.