This article considers the relationship between official discourse and popular perceptions of crime during the Russian Civil War. After the October Revolution all pre-revolutionary criminal law was dismantled, and until the promulgation of a Criminal Code in 1922 Russia had no formal taxonomy of crime. The criminal justice system was to be guided instead by the concept of ‘revolutionary conscience’. Despite the absence of a full formal classification of criminality, people continued to report to the militia (the regular police) what they regarded as criminal activity. The evidence from the militia files suggests that popular notions of criminality were largely unaffected by revolutionary concepts. This did not mean, however, that grassroots...
This book is the first to explore the largely unknown world of rural crime and justice in post-emanc...
The disintegration of the tsarist police system in 1917 presented contemporaries with the challenge ...
In the present article author examines questions of creating modern Russian institutions and bodies ...
This article considers the relationship between official discourse and popular perceptions of crime ...
This article examines the militia -- the Soviet regular police force -- and its criminal investigati...
One of the most important questions concerning Soviet history is: how did the period widely known as...
This article is concerned with the historical continuity of such criminal law institutions as crime ...
The article presents the development of the organized crime in Russia. The author has identified fou...
The results of the study showed that the system of values, attitudes, ways of behaviour and lifestyl...
This article explores some of the principal themes in the intellectual history of early Soviet state...
The article discusses the dilemma of the concept of criminality and it's different reflections in We...
The article describes the results of the work of the analytical department of an independent securit...
Unlike some other Soviet Codes, first acts of the Bolshevist Criminal law were not modeled after the...
This article examines how the Bolshevik party and state officials in early Soviet Russia understood ...
The article examines criminality in Ukraine in conditions of martial law. It has been proven that cr...
This book is the first to explore the largely unknown world of rural crime and justice in post-emanc...
The disintegration of the tsarist police system in 1917 presented contemporaries with the challenge ...
In the present article author examines questions of creating modern Russian institutions and bodies ...
This article considers the relationship between official discourse and popular perceptions of crime ...
This article examines the militia -- the Soviet regular police force -- and its criminal investigati...
One of the most important questions concerning Soviet history is: how did the period widely known as...
This article is concerned with the historical continuity of such criminal law institutions as crime ...
The article presents the development of the organized crime in Russia. The author has identified fou...
The results of the study showed that the system of values, attitudes, ways of behaviour and lifestyl...
This article explores some of the principal themes in the intellectual history of early Soviet state...
The article discusses the dilemma of the concept of criminality and it's different reflections in We...
The article describes the results of the work of the analytical department of an independent securit...
Unlike some other Soviet Codes, first acts of the Bolshevist Criminal law were not modeled after the...
This article examines how the Bolshevik party and state officials in early Soviet Russia understood ...
The article examines criminality in Ukraine in conditions of martial law. It has been proven that cr...
This book is the first to explore the largely unknown world of rural crime and justice in post-emanc...
The disintegration of the tsarist police system in 1917 presented contemporaries with the challenge ...
In the present article author examines questions of creating modern Russian institutions and bodies ...