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Perspectives on Soviet Law for the 1980s

Perspectives on Soviet Law for the 1980s NEW BOOKS Perspectives on Soviet Law for the 1980s edited by F.J.M. FELDBRUGGE and WILLIAM B. SIMONS University of Leyden Faculty of Law, The Netherlands LAW IN EASTERN EUROPE 24 1982, 180 pp., cloth Dfl. 75.00 (approx. US$ 32.50) ISBN 90-247-2561-5 Over the past decade, the role of law in the USSR and Eastern Europe has grown in importance, both with regard to domestic and international affairs. Two recent examples are the legal recognition of the new Polish trade union Solidarity and the implementation problems of the Helsinki Final Act. This work is a collection of selected papers presented at the Second World Con- gress for Soviet and East European Studies (Garmisch, 1980) and covers such topics as a comparative study of socialist legality, Soviet criminal and admin- istrative justice, Soviet economic law, the new Soviet constitution, Soviet property law, and COMECON. Contents List of selected papers from the Second World Congresss for Soviet and East European studies. Preface. 1. Alice Erh-Soon Tay and Eugene Kamenka: Marxism and the problem of continuity or heritability of law. 2. George Ginsburgs: Dictatorship of the proletariat versus the All-People's State: constitutional contrasts. 3. Ivo Lapenna: Dictatorship of the proletariat and the All-People's State in the light of original Marxism. 4. Georg Brunner: Recent developments in the Soviet concept of human rights. 5. Yuri I. Luryi: Three years of the new USSR Constitution: The Soviet approach to human rights. 6. Gordon B. Smith: Development and evolution of "Socialist Legality" in the Soviet Union. 7. Teruo Matsushita: A comparative study of Socialist legality - legality in East and West. 8. Richard Szawlowski: Socialist legality: the Polish case. 9. Peter H. Solomon, Jr: Criminalization and decrim- inalization in Soviet criminal policy, 1917-1941. 10. Peter H. Juviler: Diver- sion from criminal to administrative justice: Soviet law, practice, and con- flicts of policy. 11. Frits Gorle: The latest developments in the area of comradely justice. 12. Hiroshi Oda: The sytem of administrative sanctions in the Soviet Union. 13. Harold J. Berman: The concept of Soviet economic law and its implications for the Soviet planned economy. 14. Stanislaw Pomorski: The current economic law debate and its ramifications. 15. William E. Butler: The law of personal ownership in the Soviet Union. 16. Bernard Dutoit: The law of property in the socialist states: evolution or status quo? 17. William E. Butler: Comecon and third countries. 18. Kazimierz Grzybowski: Peaceful coexistence and international trade. Index. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Review of Socialist Law (in 1992 continued as Review of Central and East European Law) Brill

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Publisher
Brill
Copyright
© 1982 Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands
ISSN
0165-0300
eISSN
1875-2985
DOI
10.1163/187529882X00217
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

NEW BOOKS Perspectives on Soviet Law for the 1980s edited by F.J.M. FELDBRUGGE and WILLIAM B. SIMONS University of Leyden Faculty of Law, The Netherlands LAW IN EASTERN EUROPE 24 1982, 180 pp., cloth Dfl. 75.00 (approx. US$ 32.50) ISBN 90-247-2561-5 Over the past decade, the role of law in the USSR and Eastern Europe has grown in importance, both with regard to domestic and international affairs. Two recent examples are the legal recognition of the new Polish trade union Solidarity and the implementation problems of the Helsinki Final Act. This work is a collection of selected papers presented at the Second World Con- gress for Soviet and East European Studies (Garmisch, 1980) and covers such topics as a comparative study of socialist legality, Soviet criminal and admin- istrative justice, Soviet economic law, the new Soviet constitution, Soviet property law, and COMECON. Contents List of selected papers from the Second World Congresss for Soviet and East European studies. Preface. 1. Alice Erh-Soon Tay and Eugene Kamenka: Marxism and the problem of continuity or heritability of law. 2. George Ginsburgs: Dictatorship of the proletariat versus the All-People's State: constitutional contrasts. 3. Ivo Lapenna: Dictatorship of the proletariat and the All-People's State in the light of original Marxism. 4. Georg Brunner: Recent developments in the Soviet concept of human rights. 5. Yuri I. Luryi: Three years of the new USSR Constitution: The Soviet approach to human rights. 6. Gordon B. Smith: Development and evolution of "Socialist Legality" in the Soviet Union. 7. Teruo Matsushita: A comparative study of Socialist legality - legality in East and West. 8. Richard Szawlowski: Socialist legality: the Polish case. 9. Peter H. Solomon, Jr: Criminalization and decrim- inalization in Soviet criminal policy, 1917-1941. 10. Peter H. Juviler: Diver- sion from criminal to administrative justice: Soviet law, practice, and con- flicts of policy. 11. Frits Gorle: The latest developments in the area of comradely justice. 12. Hiroshi Oda: The sytem of administrative sanctions in the Soviet Union. 13. Harold J. Berman: The concept of Soviet economic law and its implications for the Soviet planned economy. 14. Stanislaw Pomorski: The current economic law debate and its ramifications. 15. William E. Butler: The law of personal ownership in the Soviet Union. 16. Bernard Dutoit: The law of property in the socialist states: evolution or status quo? 17. William E. Butler: Comecon and third countries. 18. Kazimierz Grzybowski: Peaceful coexistence and international trade. Index.

Journal

Review of Socialist Law (in 1992 continued as Review of Central and East European Law)Brill

Published: Jan 1, 1982

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