Russian Lawyers and the Soviet State
Publisher
: Princeton University Press
Summary :This is a study of conflict between pre- and postrevolutionary
visions of the role of law and the professions in Russia. It seeks
to explain how the Bar, a legal institution of the old order dedicated
to the representation of individual interests, has been
integrated into the Soviet state, whose proclaimed commitment
is to the furtherance of collective, or class, interests. The primary
focus of the work is on the first two decades of Soviet rule, from
the formal abolition of the Russian Bar in 1917 to the end of
the 1930s when private legal practice was finally outlawed, when
large numbers of young Soviet-trained advocates entered the
profession, and when the last vestiges of overt resistance to party
and government control of the Bar were eliminated. It was in
this period that the Soviet Bar acquired its definitive shape and
the major issues of professional development were resolved
Copies :
No. |
Barcode |
Location |
No. Shelf |
Availability |
1 |
00131309 |
Perpustakaan Pusat |
|
TIDAK DIPINJAMKAN |