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The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1954. — 470 p. — ISBN 978-94-015-0324-2; 978-94-015-0869-8 (eBook) A study which aims to make clear the unique and specific characteristics of the Soviet regime is not a simple matter; it requires economic, psychological and sociological analysis of the legal order established for realization of the communist program. It is not the details but the...
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Article. - Old years. - 2013. - volume 28. - No. 2. - With. 18-22. The common law is investigated as an element of the standard culture of the Kabardians in the XIXth century. Along with the common law, the separate elements of the traditional standard culture of the Kabardians; such as the traditional institutes of social self- regulation, the system of class relations, the...
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Cambridge University Press, 2007. — 276 p. The government of Soviet Russia wrote new laws for Russia that were as revolutionary as its political philosophy. These new laws challenged social relations as they had developed in Europe over centuries. These laws generated intense interest in theWest. To some, they were the harbinger of what should be done in the West and, hence, a...
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London: Victor Gollangz Ltd., 1937. — 210 p. Preliminary Investigation Trial A Political Trial The Indictment High Treason Spying Sabotage Terrorism Last Words, Verdict and Sentence English Opinion Appendix: Verbatim Report of Radek’s Evidence
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Cambridge University Press, 2008. — 385 p. This book is the first in-depth study of the actual role that the Russian Constitutional Court played in protecting fundamental rights and resolving legislative–executive struggles and federalism disputes in both Yeltsin’s and Putin’s Russia. Alexei Trochev argues that judicial empowerment is a nonlinear process with unintended...
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NCEER, 2004. — 37 p. Domestically, the Russia Empire was not governed by the rule of law. Yet from 1870 down through 1917, it was precisely the Russian government that championed the cause that all states, including the Russian Empire, be brought under an emerging system of codified international law — specifically, a codified set of the rules and customs of land warfare. This...
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Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press, 1980. - 395 pgs. Officialdom and Bureaucratization: An Introduction - Don Karl Rowney, Walter M. Pinter Seventeenth-Century Chanceries and their Staffs - Borivoj Plavsic The Origins of the Noble Official: The Boyar Elite, 1613-1689 - Robert O. Crummey Social and Career Characteristics of the Administrative Elite, 1689-1761...
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Leiden; Boston: Brill; Martinus Nijhoff Pub., 2009. — xxviii, 336 p. — (Law in Eastern Europe, Vol. 59). — ISBN: 978-90-04-16985-2. Much of what we know about the colourful Russian middle ages comes from legal sources: the treaties of Russian-Scandinavian warlords with the Byzantine emperors, the gradual penetration of Christianity and Byzantine institutions, the endless game...
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Cambridge University Press, 2012 . - 503 p. ISBN: 1107025133, 1107699762 This is a magisterial new account of the day-to-day practice of Russian criminal justice in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Nancy Kollmann contrasts Russian written law with its pragmatic application by local judges, arguing that this combination of formal law and legal institutions with...
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