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The Passionate Legal Debates of the Early Years of the Russian Revolution

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 June 2015

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Extract

The Russian Revolution of October 1917 marked the first large-scale attempt to fundamentally reorganize economic, social and legal life along egalitarian lines. In relation to legal theory and practice, the revolution launched the boldest experiment of the 20th century, accompanied by passionate, free-ranging and scholarly debates. Lenin’s government initially sought to fashion a radically new approach to the state, law and legal theory, with some striking results in the fields such as criminal and family law. Moreover, it attempted to create the conditions for the ultimate fading away (“withering away”) of law and the state. These achievements offer insights for the future, notwithstanding the subsequent degeneration under Stalin.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2001

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References

1. See, for example, Kamenka, E. & Tay, A., “The Life and Afterlife of a Bolshevik Jurist”, (Jan.-Feb. 1970) Problems of Communism 72; C. Arthur, “Towards a Materialist Theory of Law” (Winter 1976–77) 7 Critique 31; S. Redhead, “The Discrete Charm of Bourgeois Law; A Note on Pashukanis” (1978) 9 Critique 113; P. Beirne & R. Sharlet, eds., Pashukanis: Selected Writings on Marxism and Law (London: Academic Press, 1980). For earlier works see H. Kelsen, The Communist Theory of Law (London: Stevens, 1955); J. Hazard, Soviet Legal Philosophy (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1951); L. Fuller, “Pashukanis and Vyshinskii: a study of the development of Marxist Legal Theory” (1949) 47 Mich. L. Rev. 1157; and R. Schlesinger, Soviet Legal Theory (London: Routledge, 1951)Google Scholar.

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23. See ibid. at 14–15,25.

24. Ibid. at 35–37.

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27. Ibid. at 37–38.

28. Ibid. at 38–41.

29. Ibid. at 41.

30. Ibid. at 50. (Next two quotations from same page.)

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38. Ibid. at 67

39. Ibid. at 69.

40. Ibid. at 84.

41. Ibid at 87–89.

42. Ibid at 70.

43. Ibid at 72.

44. Ibid. at 73–74.

45. Ibid. at 76.

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56. Ibid. at 134.

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58. Ibid. at 177–78 [italics in original].

59. Ibid.

60. Ibid. at 72–73.

61. Zile, supra note 17 at 229.

62. Zile, supra note 17 at 211.

63. Ibid. at 211–15.

64. Pashukanis, supra note 6 at 58, 81.

65. Zile, supra note 17 at 215–19.

66. Ibid. at 220.

67. Pashukanis, “The Narrow Horizon of Bourgeois Law” in Jaworskyj, supra note 2 at 137.

68. Pashukanis, supra note 6 at 61.

69. Zile, supra note 17 at 230.

70. Ibid. at 229.

71. Ibid. at 233.

72. Ibid. at 234.

73. Trotsky, supra note 8 at 62.

74. Ibid. at 62.

75. Zile, supra note 17 at 258.

76. Ibid. at 259.

77. Zile, supra note 17 at 258–59.