Description

Book Synopsis

Lawyers often play pivotal roles in building democracies. PamelaJordan's engaging study of the Russian bar (advokatura) providesa richly textured portrait of how, after the USSR's collapse,practising lawyers called advocates began to assume new, self-definedroles as contributors to legal reform and defenders of rights inRussia.

Using the historical institutionalism approach as her analyticalframework and drawing from comparative literature on legal professions,Jordan argues that the post-Soviet advokatura as an institution gainedmore, although not complete, autonomy from the state as it struggled toredefine itself as a profession. Advocates formed new bar associationsand law offices and now have a broader range of ways to defendclients' rights than they did during the Soviet era. Jordansuggests that advocates' work is supporting the gro

Trade Review
Jordan’s book represents a major contribution to the study of Russian legal institutions, as well as post-Soviet Russian politics. As such, the book should be of interest to Russian specialists as well as a broader audience interested in comparative law and the development of civil society. Her exemplary scholarship includes thorough consideration of available literature as well as numerous interviews with leading Russian advocates and jurists… Nevertheless, Jordan’s comprehensive discussion of legal hisotyr and current practices will serve as mandatory reading for scholars interested in Russian politics and understanding Russia’s uneven attempts – both past and present – at legal reform. -- William E. Pomeranz, PhD, Attorney, Reed Smith, Washington DC * Law and Politics Books Review, Vol. 16, No. 3 *
The struggle for legal reform in Russia, the famous Russian political cases, and the behavior of Russian courts get a lot of attention, but Russian lawyers themselves rarely do. How their role is changing, who sets the standards for their education and admission to the guild, how they earn a living, and what their contribution has been to modernizing the Russian legal system are matters little studied -- until Jordan's efficient account. -- Robert Levgold * Foreign Affairs, November/December 2005 *

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Abbreviations

Introduction

1. The Russian and Soviet Bars: A Historical Perspective,1864-1984

2. The Advokatura in the Gorbachev Period, 1985-91

3. Chaos in the Advokatura, 1992-2002

4. Autonomy and Dependence: State-Bar Relations in the 1990s

5. Restructuring the Advokatura from Above, 2002-3

6. Russian Criminal Defence Advocacy in the Post-Soviet Era

7. New Trends in Advocates’ Practice in the Civil Sphere

Conclusion

Appendices

1 Surveys of Advocates’ Opinions /

2 Stages of a Russian Criminal Case /

Notes /

Selected Bibliography /

Index /

Defending Rights in Russia

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    A Paperback / softback by Pamela Jordan

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      View other formats and editions of Defending Rights in Russia by Pamela Jordan

      Publisher: University of British Columbia Press
      Publication Date: 01/01/2006
      ISBN13: 9780774811637, 978-0774811637
      ISBN10: 0774811633

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Lawyers often play pivotal roles in building democracies. PamelaJordan's engaging study of the Russian bar (advokatura) providesa richly textured portrait of how, after the USSR's collapse,practising lawyers called advocates began to assume new, self-definedroles as contributors to legal reform and defenders of rights inRussia.

      Using the historical institutionalism approach as her analyticalframework and drawing from comparative literature on legal professions,Jordan argues that the post-Soviet advokatura as an institution gainedmore, although not complete, autonomy from the state as it struggled toredefine itself as a profession. Advocates formed new bar associationsand law offices and now have a broader range of ways to defendclients' rights than they did during the Soviet era. Jordansuggests that advocates' work is supporting the gro

      Trade Review
      Jordan’s book represents a major contribution to the study of Russian legal institutions, as well as post-Soviet Russian politics. As such, the book should be of interest to Russian specialists as well as a broader audience interested in comparative law and the development of civil society. Her exemplary scholarship includes thorough consideration of available literature as well as numerous interviews with leading Russian advocates and jurists… Nevertheless, Jordan’s comprehensive discussion of legal hisotyr and current practices will serve as mandatory reading for scholars interested in Russian politics and understanding Russia’s uneven attempts – both past and present – at legal reform. -- William E. Pomeranz, PhD, Attorney, Reed Smith, Washington DC * Law and Politics Books Review, Vol. 16, No. 3 *
      The struggle for legal reform in Russia, the famous Russian political cases, and the behavior of Russian courts get a lot of attention, but Russian lawyers themselves rarely do. How their role is changing, who sets the standards for their education and admission to the guild, how they earn a living, and what their contribution has been to modernizing the Russian legal system are matters little studied -- until Jordan's efficient account. -- Robert Levgold * Foreign Affairs, November/December 2005 *

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments

      Abbreviations

      Introduction

      1. The Russian and Soviet Bars: A Historical Perspective,1864-1984

      2. The Advokatura in the Gorbachev Period, 1985-91

      3. Chaos in the Advokatura, 1992-2002

      4. Autonomy and Dependence: State-Bar Relations in the 1990s

      5. Restructuring the Advokatura from Above, 2002-3

      6. Russian Criminal Defence Advocacy in the Post-Soviet Era

      7. New Trends in Advocates’ Practice in the Civil Sphere

      Conclusion

      Appendices

      1 Surveys of Advocates’ Opinions /

      2 Stages of a Russian Criminal Case /

      Notes /

      Selected Bibliography /

      Index /

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