The legal dimension in cold-war interactions : some notes from the field / / edited by Tatiana Borisova, William B. Simons.

Given their relationship to political rhetoric, myths of the Cold War certainly matter today; the legal field is no exception. Although Cold-War studies remains a blooming field, its legal dimensions have not been sufficiently developed. Only recently have legal scholars begun to embark upon researc...

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Bibliographic Details
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Year of Publication:2012
Language:English
Series:Law in Eastern Europe 62.
Physical Description:1 online resource (209 p.)
Notes:Description based upon print version of record.
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Other title:Preliminary Material /
Introduction Legal Front of the Cold War: Why? /
Talking Across the Fence: Cold-War Academic Cooperation in the Legal Sphere /
Soviet Law and Perestroika Revisited /
The New Political Polarization of the World and the Reform of State Property Management in Russia /
The Relevance of the Cold War for Russian Jurisprudence: Private Law /
Russian International Law and Indeterminacy: Cold War and Post-Soviet Dynamics /
Separation of Powers without Checks and Balances: The Failure of Semi-Presidentialism and the Making of the Russian Constitutional System, 1991-1993 /
The Impact of the Cold War on Soviet and US Law: Reconsidering the Legacy /
Photographs /
List of Contributors /
Subject-Matter Index /
Name Index /
Summary:Given their relationship to political rhetoric, myths of the Cold War certainly matter today; the legal field is no exception. Although Cold-War studies remains a blooming field, its legal dimensions have not been sufficiently developed. Only recently have legal scholars begun to embark upon research in law and the Cold War and how this area is regarded nowadays, both explicitly and implicitly. Preliminary results show that, on both sides of the Iron Curtain, knowledge of law of the ‘Other’ was encapsulated within two main frameworks: ideological and pragmatic. How did these approaches interrelate and influence one another? Can pure knowledge strictly be divided from contextual conditions? The chapters in this volume present retrospective accounts of actors who have been involved in the circulation of knowledge through the Curtain and, also, research on recent political and legal phenomena echoing the Cold-War discourse. Contributors: Jane Henderson Albert J. Schmidt Zlata E. Benevolenskaya Leena Lehtinen Boris N. Mamlyuk William Partlett Paul B. Stephan
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:1283855062
9004203338
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: edited by Tatiana Borisova, William B. Simons.