Hilde Eiserhardt (February 24, 1888, in Esch [de] (Waldems) – April 6, 1955, in Frankfurt) was a German lawyer in a leading role at the German Association for Public and Private Welfare. At the German Association for Public and Private Welfare (DV), Eiserhardt was a speaker from 1919, and then from 1922 to 1936 deputy managing director of the DV under Wilhelm Polligkeit.[1] She was a vehement proponent of a never-issued preservation law, which should regulate the legal basis for a compulsory placement of the so-called "anti-social" and "inferior".[2]
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