This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Routledge via the link in this recordOn 24 November 1917, the Bolsheviks published their vision for a new justice system. Abolishing all existing courts, they established local (later people’s) courts for crimes such as murder, theft and civil disputes, and revolutionary tribunals to combat threatening ‘counter-revolutionary’ crimes such as plots, revolts and sabotage. Both courts were instructed to rely on existing laws only insofar as they did not contradict new decrees or party programmes, and to use revolutionary consciousness to reach a verdict. Through this and subsequent decrees, the Bolsheviks intended to create a new legal culture for the revolutionary sta...
Questions about the legal system in the Soviet Union during the first twenty years of Soviet power i...
The article describes the evolution of relations between the GPU–OGPU and prosecutors in the Omsk-I...
The first thing we do, let\u27s kill all the lawyers. Shakespeare, King Henry VI Part II, act IV, s...
Copyright © 2011 Institute of Historical Research. The definitive version is available at http://onl...
The article deals with the impact of revolutionary movement of 1860-1881 on the judicial reform intr...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis (Routle...
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...
Marxist revolutionaries used to dedicate whole lifetimes to fight the enemy, the prevailing politica...
The 1917 Soviet Revolution in Russia was an attempt to fundamentally reorganise economic, social and...
In relation to political and legal theory and practice, the 1917 Russian Revolution launched the bol...
From its inception, the Russian Empire sought to create a unified judicial and legal space. Legal pl...
The five articles assembled in the present issue of Cahiers du Monde russe are intended to contribut...
The cultural logic of revolutionary law. This article is a study of how the monarchical concept of...
Questions about the legal system in the Soviet Union during the first twenty years of Soviet power i...
Questions about the legal system in the Soviet Union during the first twenty years of Soviet power i...
The article describes the evolution of relations between the GPU–OGPU and prosecutors in the Omsk-I...
The first thing we do, let\u27s kill all the lawyers. Shakespeare, King Henry VI Part II, act IV, s...
Copyright © 2011 Institute of Historical Research. The definitive version is available at http://onl...
The article deals with the impact of revolutionary movement of 1860-1881 on the judicial reform intr...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis (Routle...
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...
Marxist revolutionaries used to dedicate whole lifetimes to fight the enemy, the prevailing politica...
The 1917 Soviet Revolution in Russia was an attempt to fundamentally reorganise economic, social and...
In relation to political and legal theory and practice, the 1917 Russian Revolution launched the bol...
From its inception, the Russian Empire sought to create a unified judicial and legal space. Legal pl...
The five articles assembled in the present issue of Cahiers du Monde russe are intended to contribut...
The cultural logic of revolutionary law. This article is a study of how the monarchical concept of...
Questions about the legal system in the Soviet Union during the first twenty years of Soviet power i...
Questions about the legal system in the Soviet Union during the first twenty years of Soviet power i...
The article describes the evolution of relations between the GPU–OGPU and prosecutors in the Omsk-I...
The first thing we do, let\u27s kill all the lawyers. Shakespeare, King Henry VI Part II, act IV, s...