Book Description
Offers a more complex and nuanced understanding of the Russian justice system than stereotypes and preconceptions lead us to believe.
Author : Marina Kurkchiyan
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 311 pages
File Size : 21,83 MB
Release : 2018-07-12
Category : History
ISBN : 1107198771
Offers a more complex and nuanced understanding of the Russian justice system than stereotypes and preconceptions lead us to believe.
Author : Kathryn Hendley
Publisher : Cornell University Press
Page : 377 pages
File Size : 46,68 MB
Release : 2017-02-07
Category : Law
ISBN : 1501708090
Everyday Law in Russia challenges the prevailing common wisdom that Russians cannot rely on their law and that Russian courts are hopelessly politicized and corrupt. While acknowledging the persistence of verdicts dictated by the Kremlin in politically charged cases, Kathryn Hendley explores how ordinary Russian citizens experience law. Relying on her own extensive observational research in Russia’s new justice-of-the-peace courts as well as her analysis of a series of focus groups, she documents Russians’ complicated attitudes regarding law. The same Russian citizen who might shy away from taking a dispute with a state agency or powerful individual to court might be willing to sue her insurance company if it refuses to compensate her for damages following an auto accident. Hendley finds that Russian judges pay close attention to the law in mundane disputes, which account for the vast majority of the cases brought to the Russian courts. Any reluctance on the part of ordinary Russian citizens to use the courts is driven primarily by their fear of the time and cost—measured in both financial and emotional terms—of the judicial process. Like their American counterparts, Russians grow more willing to pursue disputes as the social distance between them and their opponents increases; Russians are loath to sue friends and neighbors, but are less reluctant when it comes to strangers or acquaintances. Hendley concludes that the "rule of law" rubric is ill suited to Russia and other authoritarian polities where law matters most—but not all—of the time.
Author : Nancy Kollmann
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 505 pages
File Size : 20,35 MB
Release : 2012-10-11
Category : History
ISBN : 1107025133
A magisterial account of criminal law in early modern Russia in a wider European and Eurasian context.
Author : Agnieszka Kubal
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 229 pages
File Size : 44,62 MB
Release : 2019-04-11
Category : History
ISBN : 1108417892
How do immigration and refugee laws work 'in action' in Russia? This book offers a complex, empirical and nuanced understanding.
Author : Marina Kurkchiyan
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 311 pages
File Size : 37,31 MB
Release : 2018-07-12
Category : Law
ISBN : 1108187633
Much of the media coverage and academic literature on Russia suggests that the justice system is unreliable, ineffective and corrupt. But what if we look beyond the stereotypes and preconceptions? This volume features contributions from a number of scholars who studied Russia empirically and in-depth, through extensive field research, observations in courts, and interviews with judges and other legal professionals as well as lay actors. A number of tensions in the everyday experiences of justice in Russia are identified and the concept of the 'administerial model of justice' is introduced to illuminate some of the less obvious layers of Russian legal tradition including: file-driven procedure, extreme legal formalism combined with informality of the pre-trial proceedings, followed by ritualistic format of the trial. The underlying argument is that Russian justice is a much more complex system than is commonly supposed, and that it both requires and deserves a more nuanced understanding.
Author : Jonathan Daly
Publisher : Bloomsbury Publishing
Page : 257 pages
File Size : 44,46 MB
Release : 2018-02-22
Category : History
ISBN : 1474224350
Eighteenth-century Russia -- Nineteenth-century Russia before the emancipation -- From the great reforms to revolution -- The era of Lenin -- The era of Stalin -- The USSR under "mature socialism" -- Criminal justice since the collapse of communism -- Conclusion -- Glossary -- Works cited.
Author : Valeriĭ Chalidze
Publisher : Random House (NY)
Page : 264 pages
File Size : 23,98 MB
Release : 1977
Category : Social Science
ISBN :
"According to official Soviet propaganda, crime is an adjunct of capitalism and has virtually disappeared in the Soviet Union; whatever crimes are committed are attributed to survivals of capitalism sixty years after the Revolution. As a result, crime statistics are hard to come by, and even legal scholars cannot always get access to court records. Nevertheless, Soviet dissident Valery Chalidze, using whatever records he was able to find and drawing on previous conversations with informed individuals in the USSR, here presents a side of the Soviet Union not previously covered in books on the subject. His object is to fill some of the gaps that exist in the outside world's knowledge of the USSR, but he also confesses that "I have always been fascinated by the customs and personalities of Russian criminals," and he begins with the centuries-old Russian criminal tradition--the attitude, often of tolerance, toward various kinds of crime that no later history has been able to erase completely. He covers the use made of the criminal underworld by the Bolsheviks during their rise to power and the later split between the underworld and the new regime. And he discusses in some detail recent murders, rapes, thefts and the all-prevailing 'hooliganism' (acts of random violence, often while drunk) that accounts for a vast majority of court cases today. Finally he turns to such peculiarly Soviet crimes as 'private enterprise' and 'entrepreneurism.'" -- Provided by publisher
Author : Elizabeth A. Wood
Publisher : Cornell University Press
Page : 312 pages
File Size : 41,39 MB
Release : 2018-05-31
Category : History
ISBN : 1501711474
After seizing power in 1917, the Bolshevik regime faced the daunting task of educating and bringing culture to the vast and often illiterate mass of Soviet soldiers, workers, and peasants. As part of this campaign, civilian educators and political instructors in the military developed didactic theatrical fictions performed in workers' and soldiers' clubs in the years from 1919 to 1933. The subjects addressed included politics, religion, agronomy, health, sexuality, and literature. The trials were designed to permit staging by amateurs at low cost, thus engaging the citizenry in their own remaking. In reconstructing the history of the so-called agitation trials and placing them in a rich social context, Elizabeth A. Wood makes a major contribution to rethinking the first decade of Soviet history. Her book traces the arc by which a regime's campaign to educate the masses by entertaining and disciplining them culminated in a policy of brute shaming.Over the course of the 1920s, the nature of the trials changed, and this process is one of the main themes of the later chapters of Wood's book. Rather than humanizing difficult issues, the trials increasingly made their subjects (alcoholics, boys who smoked, truants) into objects of shame and dismissal. By the end of the decade and the early 1930s, the trials had become weapons for enforcing social and political conformity. Their texts were still fictional—indeed, fantastical—but the actors and the verdicts were now all too real.
Author : Oleg Kharkhordin
Publisher : Univ of California Press
Page : 580 pages
File Size : 31,76 MB
Release : 2023-04-28
Category : History
ISBN : 0520921801
Oleg Kharkhordin has constructed a compelling, subtle, and complex genealogy of the Soviet individual that is as much about Michel Foucault as it is about Russia. Examining the period from the Russian Revolution to the fall of Gorbachev, Kharkhordin demonstrates that Party rituals—which forced each Communist to reflect intensely and repeatedly on his or her "self," an entirely novel experience for many of them—had their antecedents in the Orthodox Christian practices of doing penance in the public gaze. Individualization in Soviet Russia occurred through the intensification of these public penitential practices rather than the private confessional practices that are characteristic of Western Christianity. He also finds that objectification of the individual in Russia relied on practices of mutual surveillance among peers, rather than on the hierarchical surveillance of subordinates by superiors that characterized the West. The implications of this book expand well beyond its brilliant analysis of the connection between Bolshevism and Eastern Orthodoxy to shed light on many questions about the nature of Russian society and culture.
Author : Alena V. Ledeneva
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 331 pages
File Size : 23,88 MB
Release : 2013-02-14
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 0521110823
A political ethnography of the inner workings of Putin's sistema, contributing to our understanding Russia's prospects for future modernisation.