Charles Marie Joseph Désiré de Visscher was a Belgian scholar and practitioner of international law, as well as judge on the Permanent Court of International Justice and International Court of Justice.
Background
Charles de Visscher was born in Ghent on 2 August 1884. Orphaned at twelve years old following the death of his father, a professor at Ghent University, Charles de Visscher and his younger brother Ferdinand (d 1964) were placed in the care of Abbé Watté.
Education
The elder de Visscher attended Ghent University where he earned his Docteur en Droit—at the time, an initial law degree—graduating 8 October 1907.
Career
He earned a second degree, this time in political science, graduating 2 February 1909. In 1911, de Visscher became professor at the Ghent University faculty of law. He taught courses on civil law, criminal law and private international law, succeeding Albéric Rolin.
After World War I, de Visscher worked as a legal advisor to the Belgian Foreign Ministry.
In 1924, he was elected Dean of the Ghent University faculty of law. In 1931, de Visscher left Ghent University due to the Flamenpolitik, and began teaching at the Catholic University of Louvain.
First appearing before the Permanent Court of International Justice was in 1927, de Visscher served as counsel for the Romanian government during their dispute over the Danube Commission. In 1931, de Visscher represented Poland in Access to, or Anchorage in, the Portuguese of Danzig of Polish War Vessels, and subsequently in Treatment of Polish Nationals and Other Persons of Polish Origin or Speech in the Danzig Territory.
His final appearance as counsel before the Permanent Court was in 1933, where he represented Denmark in Legal Status of Eastern Greenland.
Following the death of Judge Rolin-Jaequemyns in 1936, de Visscher was appointed as Belgium"s ad hoc judge in the Permanent Court of International Justice. He was elected a full judge in 1937, in which position he served until the court"s dissolution. He subsequently served on the International Court of Justice from 1946 until 1951.
Couvreur states that the consensus is de Visscher"s not being re-elected, while unexpected, was due to "the subtle interplay of political equilibria", rather than any particular failing of de Visscher himself.
After leaving judicial work, de Visscher returned to academia, but also participated in arbitral bodies.
Membership
Institut de Droit International. Royal Academy of Science, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium.