1st Edition

Soviet Legal Theory Ils 273

By Rudolf Schlesinger Copyright 1945
    326 Pages
    by Routledge

    328 Pages
    by Routledge

    First Published in 1998. This is Volume VII of eight in the Sociology of the Soviet Union series. Written in 1945, this is a a study about the social background and development of Soviet Legal theory and deals with Soviet conceptions of Law. Law in the USSR is not an isolated systems of values and norms but can be seen as an agent in social life, as it regarded as an expression of social conditions and social needs, being more sociological than legal.

    Chapter 1 Soviet Legal Theory; Chapter 2 The Theoretical Foundations of the Soviet Conceptions of Law; Chapter 3 The Basic Conceptions of the First Revolutionary Period; Chapter 4 Society and Law Under the New Economic Policy; Chapter 5 Theoretical Conceptions of Law During the N.E.P.-Period; Chapter 6 The Crisis of the N.E.P. and of the Commodity Exchange Conception of Law; Chapter 7 Soviet Society and Law at the End of the Second Five Year Plan; Chapter 8 Present Problems of Soviet Legal Theory; Chapter 9 The General Aspects and Prospects of Law as a regulating Factor in a Socialist society; Chapter 10 The Soviet Conceptions of International Law; Postscript Postscript to the Second Edition;

    Biography

    Rudolf Schlesinger