Daniel Gosch
Daniel joined the Faculty of Law community as a doctoral candidate and university assistant in April 2022. He is primarily interested in legal methodology, Austrian and international constitutional law, and legal philosophy. Daniel’s current project seeks to uncover further the nuanced role constitutions play in determining the normative content of sub-constitutional law. His thesis critically engages with the Austrian national discourse and re-examines the legal interpretation method of “constitutionally conforming interpretation”.
In addition to his research, Daniel supports Prof. Christoph Bezemek, instructs public law courses, and actively engages in events at the Faculty of Law and the International Society of Public Law. Before completing his graduate degrees in law and philosophy, Daniel was a student assistant at the Department of History of Philosophy and the Department of Public Law and Political Science. During his master’s studies, he undertook a research stay at the University of Waterloo in fall 2021.

Selected publications
- Bezemek, Christoph; Gosch, Daniel Christian: Embracing Tradition: Constitutionally Conforming Interpretation's Edge in Reconciling Statutory and Constitutional Law. In: Klatt, Matthias (ed.): Constitutionally Conforming Interpretation - Comparative Perspectives. Volume 1: National Reports. Oxford. Hart Publishing. 2023. 35-48.
To the complete list of publications in the research portal of the University of Graz.