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DOI: 10.1163/157303510X12650378240115 © Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, 2010 Review of Central and East European Law 35 (2010) 117-123 Editor’s Afterword The beginning of a new volume and the start of a new decade 1 are not the only extra highlights to the current issue; there is also the fact that this marks the thirty-fifth volume of the Review of Central and East European Law . It was originally called the Review of Socialist Law when Professor Feldbrugge, then the Leiden Professor of East European Law and Direc- tor of the Institute of East European Law and Russian Studies, 2 brought out the first issue of the journal in 1975. It is not a remarkable assertion to say that a lot has changed over the past thirty-five years; one expects change over such periods of time—although there were few who expected the changes to be as mo- mentous as the break-up of the Soviet Union and the rapid institution of democratically-oriented, market-type systems, the rebirth of private law and the rule of law. The vision that Professor Feldbrugge had to begin this publication as one of the very first in English devoted to the study of the legal systems
Review of Central and East European Law – Brill
Published: Jan 1, 2010
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