Joseph Redlich (born June 18, 1869, Göding, Bohemia [now Hodonín, Czech Republic]—died Nov. 12, 1936, Vienna, Austria) was an Austrian statesman and historian who was an influential politician before and during World War I (1914–18) and wrote important works on local government and parliamentary institutions.
Redlich, the son of a prominent Jewish industrialist, studied law and history at the University of Vienna, after which he was appointed professor of constitutional law there in 1906. He served as a German Liberal representative in the imperial Reichsrat of Austria-Hungary (1907–18), and in June 1917 he was asked to head a reform cabinet in the vain hope of establishing a constitutional democracy within the empire as a precondition for a peace settlement. His hopes for democratic reform were crushed with an imperial reorganization after the war. He remained in Vienna as an Austrian citizen, refusing further political participation except for brief service as finance minister in 1931.
Redlich’s best-known work on Austria was his uncompleted Das österreichische Staats- und Reichsproblem (1920–26; “Austrian State and Imperial Problems”), a valuable history of Austrian domestic policy after 1848. His political diaries, entitled Schicksalsjahre Österreichs, 1908–1919 (“Austria’s Fateful Years, 1908–1919”), were published in 1953–54; also important is his biography of the emperor Francis Joseph (1929).