Gerhard Schricker
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Gerhard Schricker (25 June 1935 – 6 April 2021[1]) was a German legal scholar with a focus on intellectual property and competition law.[2] He was a full professor at LMU Munich from 1973 to 2000 and served as Director of the Munich-based Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Patent, Trademark, and Copyright Law (now the Max Planck Institute for Innovation and Competition) between 1971 and 2003.
Schricker was born in Nuremberg and studied law at LMU Munich with stays at the University of Padua and the University of Salamanca.[3] Having passed his first Staatsexamen with the (rarely awarded) highest possible grade (sehr gut – very good),[4] he became a research assistant in 1960 at the LMU's Institute for Foreign and International Patent, Trademark, and Copyright Law.[5] Under the supervision of Eugen Ulmer, Schricker commenced a doctorate and in 1961 became Doctor of Law summa cum laude with a thesis on misleading advertisement under Italian competition law in comparison to German competition law.[6] He completed his second Staatsexamen in 1964.[7]
From 1966, he worked as a senior researcher at the newly founded Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Patent, Trademark, and Copyright Law.[8] While at the institute, Schricker pursued a habilitation, again under Eugen Ulmer's supervision, and in 1969 received his venia legendi in the areas of "Civil Law, Trade Law, Intellectual Property, and Comparative Private Law" from LMU.[9] His habilitation thesis, a comparative study of the relationship between breaches of statutory duties and the concept of unfair competition, quickly became a standard work in the field and helped shape German competition law jurisprudence.[10] In 1970, Schricker became a Scientific Member of the Max Planck Society.[11]

In 1971, after declining two offers of a full professorship by the universities of Hamburg and Würzburg, Gerhard Schricker became co-director of the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Patent, Trademark, and Copyright Law (alongside Eugen Ulmer and Friedrich-Karl Beier).[13] Two years later, he was also appointed to the Chair of Trade and Economic Law, Industrial Property, and Copyright at LMU.[8] He served as Dean of the Faculty of Law for a term beginning in 1979.[14] Following the retirement of Friedrich-Karl Beier in 1991, Schricker became the sole Managing Director of the Max Planck Institute, a position that he held until 2001.[15] He retired as professor in 2000, having supervised six habilitation and more than 180 dissertation theses.[16]
Schricker was president of the German ALAI group from 1982 through 1998.[3] He was a member of the Executive Committee of the German Association for the Protection of Intellectual Property (GRUR) for 27 years and headed GRUR's Standing Committee on Copyright and Publishing Law for more than 20.[17] From 1990 through 2004, he was a volunteer member of the Board of Directors of VG Wort, the second-largest German collective management organization.[1]
Gerhard Schricker died in April 2021. According to a death announcement by his family, his death followed a "prolonged and severe illness".[18]
Awards and honours
Gerhard Schricker was awarded the Great Cross of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany in 2001.[19] In the same year, he was conferred membership in the Academia Europaea.[20] He was made an honorary member of VG Wort in 2004.[1] In 2006, Schricker was awarded the Rudolf Callmann Medal by GRUR.[21] He held honorary doctorates from the Université libre de Bruxelles, Stockholm University, and Yonsei University (Seoul).[22]
A festschrift edited by Friedrich-Karl Beier was published in 1995 in honour of Gerhard Schricker on the occasion of his 60th birthday.[23] Rather unusually for the genre, the contributions were interdependent and effectively formed a self-contained 900-page study of copyright contract law.[24] In 2003, a low-circulation booklet (dubbed a "mini 'festschrift'" in the preface) was published by Munich's Max Planck Institute; it contained the addresses given at a celebratory event on the occasion of Gerhard Schricker's retirement and Eugen Ulmer's 100th birthday.[25] In the same year, the institute also dedicated to Schricker a comprehensive directory of publications by Max Planck Institute researchers.[26] Two separate festschriften, one of which on the topic of Japanese copyright law, were punlished in 2005 to celebrate Schricker's 70th birthday.[27]