This essay focuses on adversary procedure, plea-bargaining, and jury trial in the 1991 Concept of Judicial Reform of the Russian Republic. It discusses the impact of these reforms and assesses whether they have led to an improvement in the quality of evidence presented to the trier of fact, liberation of the trial and appellate judges from the juggernaut of hierarchical Soviet ‘crime control’ policies, and the development of a culture where acquittals of guilty and innocent will be tolerated when the evidence lacks credibility or is insufficient to constitute proof beyond a reasonable doubt
Much scholarly work has been done in the area of Soviet-era law and legal procedure, and this paper ...
This article briefly discusses the history of the jury trial in the Soviet Union and the recent refo...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis investigates the origins and consequences of att...
This essay focuses on adversary procedure, plea-bargaining, and jury trial in the 1991 Concept of Ju...
A new adversary system of jury trial was introduced in 1993-1994, and the rights to jury trial, adve...
This article traces the genesis of the Russian jury law of July 16, 1993, and places it in the conte...
This article discusses the Russian criminal justice system’s transformation from the unjust Soviet s...
This Article begins by discussing the nineteenth-century origins of trial by jury in Russia and the ...
Questions about the legal system in the Soviet Union during the first twenty years of Soviet power i...
After a long delay in drafting, a new Criminal Procedure Code for Russia was passed in 2001 and went...
This article explores the extent to which the Russian jury system has achieved goals crucial to the ...
This paper focuses on the dialectic between the search for truth, adversarial procedure, and lay par...
This paper presents observations of the Soviet system of justice, including the courts, the procurac...
The article considers various forms of participating in the administration of justice in criminal ca...
This article has appeared as an attempt to inform foreign scholars of the Public Model of Russian Cr...
Much scholarly work has been done in the area of Soviet-era law and legal procedure, and this paper ...
This article briefly discusses the history of the jury trial in the Soviet Union and the recent refo...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis investigates the origins and consequences of att...
This essay focuses on adversary procedure, plea-bargaining, and jury trial in the 1991 Concept of Ju...
A new adversary system of jury trial was introduced in 1993-1994, and the rights to jury trial, adve...
This article traces the genesis of the Russian jury law of July 16, 1993, and places it in the conte...
This article discusses the Russian criminal justice system’s transformation from the unjust Soviet s...
This Article begins by discussing the nineteenth-century origins of trial by jury in Russia and the ...
Questions about the legal system in the Soviet Union during the first twenty years of Soviet power i...
After a long delay in drafting, a new Criminal Procedure Code for Russia was passed in 2001 and went...
This article explores the extent to which the Russian jury system has achieved goals crucial to the ...
This paper focuses on the dialectic between the search for truth, adversarial procedure, and lay par...
This paper presents observations of the Soviet system of justice, including the courts, the procurac...
The article considers various forms of participating in the administration of justice in criminal ca...
This article has appeared as an attempt to inform foreign scholars of the Public Model of Russian Cr...
Much scholarly work has been done in the area of Soviet-era law and legal procedure, and this paper ...
This article briefly discusses the history of the jury trial in the Soviet Union and the recent refo...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis investigates the origins and consequences of att...