A Review of SOVIET LEGAL PHILOSOPHY. By V. I. Lenin, P. I. Stuchka, M. A. Reisner, E. B. Pashukanis, J. V. Stalin, A.Y. Vyshinsky, P. Yudin, S. A. Golunskii, M. S. Strogovich, and I. P. Trainin. Translated by H. H. Babb. Introduction by J. N. Hazard
Despite the fact that Soviet legal history was never very popular among Western scholars as general ...
"This book is an unconventional reappraisal of Soviet law: a field that is ripe for re-evaluation, n...
The publication of this work is an occasion for real celebration. At last there is a standard refere...
Reading Andrei Y. Vyshinsky\u27s The Law of the Soviet Union ought to be a stimulating and rewarding...
Is there a legal system in the Soviet Union, and if so, what is its role in post-Stalin Soviet socie...
Here is an excellent and much needed book. Although the enthusiastic wishful thinking about things R...
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...
The Russian Revolution of 1917 seems to fall into the pattern of the great European revolutions. As ...
Each of these four books makes a significant contribution to the rapidly growing body of literature ...
The fate of Marxism in the Soviet Union and the people’s democracies as the former’s extension owing...
For centuries, jurisprudence has been built up and developed in terms of a more or less comparable b...
A Review of Soviet Legal Institutions: Doctrines and Social Functions. By Kazimierz Grzybowski
Soviet jurisprudence of the second and third decade of the 20th century and its critical assessment ...
The Law of the Soviet State By Andrei Y. Vyshinsky New York: The Macmillan Company, 1949. Pp. xvii, ...
Despite the fact that Soviet legal history was never very popular among Western scholars as general ...
"This book is an unconventional reappraisal of Soviet law: a field that is ripe for re-evaluation, n...
The publication of this work is an occasion for real celebration. At last there is a standard refere...
Reading Andrei Y. Vyshinsky\u27s The Law of the Soviet Union ought to be a stimulating and rewarding...
Is there a legal system in the Soviet Union, and if so, what is its role in post-Stalin Soviet socie...
Here is an excellent and much needed book. Although the enthusiastic wishful thinking about things R...
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...
The Russian Revolution of 1917 seems to fall into the pattern of the great European revolutions. As ...
Each of these four books makes a significant contribution to the rapidly growing body of literature ...
The fate of Marxism in the Soviet Union and the people’s democracies as the former’s extension owing...
For centuries, jurisprudence has been built up and developed in terms of a more or less comparable b...
A Review of Soviet Legal Institutions: Doctrines and Social Functions. By Kazimierz Grzybowski
Soviet jurisprudence of the second and third decade of the 20th century and its critical assessment ...
The Law of the Soviet State By Andrei Y. Vyshinsky New York: The Macmillan Company, 1949. Pp. xvii, ...
Despite the fact that Soviet legal history was never very popular among Western scholars as general ...
"This book is an unconventional reappraisal of Soviet law: a field that is ripe for re-evaluation, n...
The publication of this work is an occasion for real celebration. At last there is a standard refere...