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Law and The Constitution of Soviet Society: The Case of Comrade Lenin
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 July 2024
Abstract
In this paper we investigate a largely unrecognized but nevertheless important chapter in the legal and political history of Soviet Marxism: the simultaneously coherent and contradictory theoretical tendencies in Lenin's pronouncements about law, legality, and delegalization (“the withering away of law”) during the socialist transition. We identify and discuss these tendencies as they unfold against the historical background of the Russian Revolution. We argue that Lenin's political and theoretical objections to legal formalism greatly contributed to the tragic neglect of constitutional mechanisms needed to secure the radical democratic motives of the revolutionary process.
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- Copyright © 1988 by The Law and Society Association
Footnotes
For their helpful comments on an earlier version of this paper the authors wish to thank Eugene Huskey, Robert Kidder, and an anonymous reviewer of this journal. Generous assistance with referencing was provided by Martha Lippa.
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