This chapter addresses both the Marxist critique of law before the Russian Revolution and the development of the Soviet Law Structure. It discusses the three main trends in Soviet Criminal Law before elucidating how these trends affected the General Part and the Special Part of Soviet Criminal Codes and overall Soviet criminal policy
Reading Andrei Y. Vyshinsky\u27s The Law of the Soviet Union ought to be a stimulating and rewarding...
The fate of Marxism in the Soviet Union and the people’s democracies as the former’s extension owing...
International audienceThe chapter follows the evolution of Soviet law through the legal repression o...
This chapter addresses both the Marxist critique of law before the Russian Revolution and the develo...
Unlike some other Soviet Codes, first acts of the Bolshevist Criminal law were not modeled after the...
This chapter assesses criminal law and enforcement in Russia. It addresses the history of the Russia...
The 1917 Soviet Revolution in Russia was an attempt to fundamentally reorganise economic, social and...
This article outlines some aspects of the post-1917 legal changes and jurisprudential debates, inclu...
The chapter is devoted to discussing constitutional and criminal law as it existed in selected count...
This comparative essay is also an objective criticism of a Soviet school of law and its western coun...
This book represents the highlight of a career of scholarship by its author and a most significant c...
The 1917 Soviet Revolution in Russia was an attempt to fundamentally reorganise economic, social and...
Despite the fact that Soviet legal history was never very popular among Western scholars as general ...
Is there a legal system in the Soviet Union, and if so, what is its role in post-Stalin Soviet socie...
Questions about the legal system in the Soviet Union during the first twenty years of Soviet power i...
Reading Andrei Y. Vyshinsky\u27s The Law of the Soviet Union ought to be a stimulating and rewarding...
The fate of Marxism in the Soviet Union and the people’s democracies as the former’s extension owing...
International audienceThe chapter follows the evolution of Soviet law through the legal repression o...
This chapter addresses both the Marxist critique of law before the Russian Revolution and the develo...
Unlike some other Soviet Codes, first acts of the Bolshevist Criminal law were not modeled after the...
This chapter assesses criminal law and enforcement in Russia. It addresses the history of the Russia...
The 1917 Soviet Revolution in Russia was an attempt to fundamentally reorganise economic, social and...
This article outlines some aspects of the post-1917 legal changes and jurisprudential debates, inclu...
The chapter is devoted to discussing constitutional and criminal law as it existed in selected count...
This comparative essay is also an objective criticism of a Soviet school of law and its western coun...
This book represents the highlight of a career of scholarship by its author and a most significant c...
The 1917 Soviet Revolution in Russia was an attempt to fundamentally reorganise economic, social and...
Despite the fact that Soviet legal history was never very popular among Western scholars as general ...
Is there a legal system in the Soviet Union, and if so, what is its role in post-Stalin Soviet socie...
Questions about the legal system in the Soviet Union during the first twenty years of Soviet power i...
Reading Andrei Y. Vyshinsky\u27s The Law of the Soviet Union ought to be a stimulating and rewarding...
The fate of Marxism in the Soviet Union and the people’s democracies as the former’s extension owing...
International audienceThe chapter follows the evolution of Soviet law through the legal repression o...