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Author
dc.contributor.author
Marko Novakhu_HU
Availability Date
dc.date.accessioned
2023-07-11T14:02:52Z
Availability Date
dc.date.available
2023-07-11T14:02:52Z
Release
dc.date.issued
2023hu_HU
Issn
dc.identifier.issn
2786-0736||2498-6275hu_HU
uri
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12944/20731
Abstract
dc.description.abstract
According to David and Grasmann, the recognised comparative law scholars, there are basically three main criteria for differentiating between legal families and their subgroups: 1 meta-legal considerations; 2 legal sources; and 3 dogmatic legal structures Concerning the last two criteria, which could also be designated as formal elements of a country’s legal identity, Slovenia has been deeply “immersed” in the civil law of a Central European type Even after the decline of the Habsburg Empire, what remained to apply on the territory of nowadays Slovenia as part of the then Kingdom of Yugoslavia, was to an important extent Austrian law Moreover, even the “decadent capitalist code” such as the Allgemeines bürgerliches Gesetzbuch (ABGB) more or less survived in spite of the communist “withering away of the state and law”, and can today still be applicable to some older cases After one thousand years of Germanic dominance, the Slovenes turned to the East in trying to build their national identity, one hundred years ago when the Empire collapsed Although that seemed to be a necessary move towards stronger national identity, it was their first step away from the rule of law The second step away from that was the period of communism that endured almost half a century Nevertheless, the formal part of the Central European legal identity somehow survived in Slovene law, with certain “injuries” of course, but it is mainly the meta-legal considerations, their sociological and psychological elements in particular, that nowadays make a difference between the situations of the rule of law in the Republic of Slovenia and, for example, in the Republic of Austria, both parts of the onetime joint Empirehu_HU
Language
dc.language
enhu_HU
Keywords
dc.subject
legal culture||legal consciousness||Slovenia||formal law||informal lawhu_HU
Title
dc.title
Central European with a Post-Socialist Limp : On the Slovene Legal Identityhu_HU
Type
dc.type
folyóiratcikkhu_HU
Version
dc.description.version
kiadóihu_HU

dc.rights.accessRights
nyílt hozzáférésűhu_HU
Doi ID
dc.identifier.doi
10 53116/pgaflr.6811hu_HU
Discipline Discipline +
dc.subject.discipline
Társadalomtudományokhu_HU

dc.subject.sciencebranch
Társadalomtudományok/Állam- és jogtudományokhu_HU
MTMT ID
dc.identifier.mtmt
34047129hu_HU

dc.identifier.journalTitle
Public Governance, Administration and Finances Law Reviewhu_HU

dc.identifier.journalVolume
8hu_HU

dc.identifier.journalIssueNumber
1hu_HU
Scope
dc.format.page
121-137hu_HU


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