Background
Hudson was born in Saint Peters, Missouri.
Hudson was born in Saint Peters, Missouri.
He made Doctor of Philosophy at Harvard University in 1917.
The American Society of International Law named a medal after him. As did Harvard University and University of Missouri School of Law with a professorship. He was nominated twice for the Nobel peace prize.
Early life and education
He received further Doctors of Philosophy from William Jewell College (1928), the University of Missouri (1931), and the University of Delaware (1934).
He became professor at Harvard in 1919, heading the department of international law from 1923 to 1954. He also was a guest lecturer at the Hague Academy of International Law (1925), the University of Calcutta (1927), and the Graduate Institute of International Studies in 1936.
He became editor of the American Journal of International Law in 1924. Hudson married in 1930 and was the father of two sons.
Since 1936, he was an associate of the Institut de Droit International.
He also was an advisor and lecturer for international law at the Naval War College from 1946 to 1952. From 1949 to 1952, he was president of the American Society of International Law and first chairman of the International Law Commission. He was appointed Special Rapporteur for the study of nationality including statelessness by the International Law Commission on 26 July 1951.
Death and legacy
He retired in 1954, and died in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1960.
His widow gave his collected 18000 letters, notes, and manuscripts to the library of Harvard in 1964. He left his collection of 1000 law books to the American Society of International Law, which created the Manley-O.-Hudson medal in his honor.
His successor at Harvard was Louis Bruno Sohn.
Institut de Droit International]
He was a judge at the Permanent Court of International Justice, a member of the International Law Commission, and a mediator in international conflicts. Furthermore, he was an advisor and member of the law department of the League of Nations, the United States Department of State, and others A member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration since 1933, he became a judge at the Permanent Court of International Justice in 1936 and held that position until the dissolution of that court in 1946.