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This title was first publised in 2002: The Third Part of the Civil
Code of the Russian Federation was adopted by the Russian
Parliament on November 26, 2001, to take effect on March 1, 2002.
It has two divisions: Inheritance Law and Private International
Law. This translation of the Third Part of the Code by Peter B.
Maggs includes an introduction by Professor Maggs as well as all
amendments to the first two parts of the Code. Some of these
amendments are of a purely technical nature, but some include
substantive changes. This volume thus complements the first and
second parts of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation, published
in 1997 by M.E. Sharpe.
This title was first published in 1997: This is the definitive
English translation of the new Russian Civil Code (Parts 1 and 2),
often referred to as "the second Russian Constitution". The Civil
Code of the Russian Federation is the result of a collaborative
effort of a leading United States expert on Russian law and of the
staff of the Private Law Research Center attached to the Office of
the President of the Russian Federation -- the Center that had
primary responsibility for drafting the new Civil Code. The
authoritative introduction, complete table of contents. and
comprehensive index combine to set this work far beyond the utility
of any existing translations of the Civil Code. It will be a
must-have resource for government, law and international business
collections.
This title was first publised in 2002: The Third Part of the Civil
Code of the Russian Federation was adopted by the Russian
Parliament on November 26, 2001, to take effect on March 1, 2002.
It has two divisions: Inheritance Law and Private International
Law. This translation of the Third Part of the Code by Peter B.
Maggs includes an introduction by Professor Maggs as well as all
amendments to the first two parts of the Code. Some of these
amendments are of a purely technical nature, but some include
substantive changes. This volume thus complements the first and
second parts of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation, published
in 1997 by M.E. Sharpe.
This title was first published in 1997: This is the definitive
English translation of the new Russian Civil Code (Parts 1 and 2),
often referred to as "the second Russian Constitution". The Civil
Code of the Russian Federation is the result of a collaborative
effort of a leading United States expert on Russian law and of the
staff of the Private Law Research Center attached to the Office of
the President of the Russian Federation -- the Center that had
primary responsibility for drafting the new Civil Code. The
authoritative introduction, complete table of contents. and
comprehensive index combine to set this work far beyond the utility
of any existing translations of the Civil Code. It will be a
must-have resource for government, law and international business
collections.
A comprehensive analysis of the Soviet economy from a legal
perspective, this book discusses the Soviet theory of legal
regulation of economic activity and the formal structure of
economic legislation. The authors argue that two contradictory
tendencies characterize the Soviet economic regulatory system:
reform and retreat from reform. Legal reform efforts usually result
from the attempt to increase economic efficiency, which typically
involves according greater independence to lower-level economic
organizations. The danger that political power might be undermined,
however, eventually leads to the reestablishment of the dominance
of the central authorities over lower-level decisionmaking. Drs.
Ioffe and Maggs also examine the tensions in labor law, which must
reconcile the needs of the economy for job mobility and high worker
morale with administrative ideals of strict discipline, and the
legal aspects of technology transfer. In addition, emphasis is
placed on the ways that economic legislation is developed and
applied in practice; the authors note in particular the progress
that has been made in systemization and codification of economic
legislation.
A comprehensive analysis of the Soviet economy from a legal
perspective, this book discusses the Soviet theory of legal
regulation of economic activity and the formal structure of
economic legislation. The authors argue that two contradictory
tendencies characterize the Soviet economic regulatory system:
reform and retreat from reform. Legal reform efforts usually result
from the attempt to increase economic efficiency, which typically
involves according greater independence to lower-level economic
organizations. The danger that political power might be undermined,
however, eventually leads to the reestablishment of the dominance
of the central authorities over lower-level decisionmaking. Drs.
Ioffe and Maggs also examine the tensions in labor law, which must
reconcile the needs of the economy for job mobility and high worker
morale with administrative ideals of strict discipline, and the
legal aspects of technology transfer. In addition, emphasis is
placed on the ways that economic legislation is developed and
applied in practice; the authors note in particular the progress
that has been made in systemization and codification of economic
legislation.
In the past, Soviet policymakers, planners, and jurists, in their
enthusiasm for economic and technological development, devoted
little attention to the often negative consequences of
modernization. New concerns, however, have become apparent in
recent literature, statutes, and decrees. In this book, political
scientists and experts on Soviet law address many of those
concerns, analyzing the legal issues associated with economic
modernization in the USSR. The central themes of the book are the
increasingly centralized nature of the policymaking process in the
USSR and Eastern Europe and the marked tendency to rely on law as a
principal mechanism for managing the undesirable consequences of
scientific and technological progress. The authors also assess the
impact of the scientific-technical revolution on Soviet-East
European relations and East-West relations, emphasizing the foreign
policy consequences of increased financial and technological
interdependence. The study does not deal with narrow legalistic
issues of technical progress; rather, its focus on policy questions
reflects the inclination of Soviet and Eastern European governments
to view those questions in terms of law and legislative activity
and to see law as an instrument of social engineering.
Reproducing actual Soviet documents, this work examines what prison
and labour camp files reveal of the fate of the poet Osip
Mandelstam and the history of the Yiddish writer Pinhas Kahanovich
(Der Nister). It also provides a guide to the analysis of
Stalin-era prison and labour camp files.
The Latvian-born legal theorist P.I. Stuchka (1865-1932), generally
recognized as one of the principal architects of modern Soviet
legal theory and the Soviet legal system itself, was a prodigious
author and editor. Twenty essays by Stuchka written between 1917
and 1931 were selected for translation
Introduction; English translation and Russian text on parallel
pages
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