The classification of Eastern European legal system has always been a challenge for comparatists. The rise and demise of socialism in the region complicated the picture even more. The recent developments have revealed what had already been suspected by several scholars: the traditional conceptual framework of legal families is in a profound crisis. How should legal systems of Eastern Europe be classified today, after the collapse of the socialist regimes? We try to answer this question in our article
Attempts from the 17th century onward anticipate the 20th-century mood of legal mapping. They classi...
The article constitutes a review of the changes in law in post-communist countries of Eastern Europe...
Significant changes in the socio-economic life of Eastern European countries and the Balkan region i...
The dissolution of widespread legal ties in the former Soviet sphere of influence poses a unique opp...
The article investigates comparative legal analysis of constitutional basics regarding perception, r...
At their lecturing desk and in some scientific publications representatives of modern jurisprudence ...
At their lecturing desk and in some scientific publications representatives of modern jurisprudence ...
The working paper contains an extended review essay of Zdenĕk Kühn, The Judiciary in Central and Eas...
The study’s objective is based on the disclosure of the specific comparative nature of the modern Ru...
1 Identity and Universality of Legal Cultures in Eastern Europe Abstract Submitted thesis explores t...
Is there a legal system in the Soviet Union, and if so, what is its role in post-Stalin Soviet socie...
After World War II Polish law was based on law of the USSR. Family law played important role in the...
The purpose of the study is to identify the main trends and factors influencing the development of t...
Both the classical theory of legal families and its more modern articulations place East European ju...
Central and Eastern Europe as well as Russia, have again openly become a large-scale borrower of Wes...
Attempts from the 17th century onward anticipate the 20th-century mood of legal mapping. They classi...
The article constitutes a review of the changes in law in post-communist countries of Eastern Europe...
Significant changes in the socio-economic life of Eastern European countries and the Balkan region i...
The dissolution of widespread legal ties in the former Soviet sphere of influence poses a unique opp...
The article investigates comparative legal analysis of constitutional basics regarding perception, r...
At their lecturing desk and in some scientific publications representatives of modern jurisprudence ...
At their lecturing desk and in some scientific publications representatives of modern jurisprudence ...
The working paper contains an extended review essay of Zdenĕk Kühn, The Judiciary in Central and Eas...
The study’s objective is based on the disclosure of the specific comparative nature of the modern Ru...
1 Identity and Universality of Legal Cultures in Eastern Europe Abstract Submitted thesis explores t...
Is there a legal system in the Soviet Union, and if so, what is its role in post-Stalin Soviet socie...
After World War II Polish law was based on law of the USSR. Family law played important role in the...
The purpose of the study is to identify the main trends and factors influencing the development of t...
Both the classical theory of legal families and its more modern articulations place East European ju...
Central and Eastern Europe as well as Russia, have again openly become a large-scale borrower of Wes...
Attempts from the 17th century onward anticipate the 20th-century mood of legal mapping. They classi...
The article constitutes a review of the changes in law in post-communist countries of Eastern Europe...
Significant changes in the socio-economic life of Eastern European countries and the Balkan region i...