Characteristic Traits
Socialist law is similar to common law or civil law but with a greatly increased public law sector and decreased private law sector.
- partial or total expulsion of the former ruling classes from the public life at early stages of existence of each socialist state; however, in all socialist states this policy gradually changed into the policy of "one socialist nation without classes"
- diversity of political views directly discouraged.
- the ruling Communist party was eventually subject to prosecution through party committees in first place.
- abolition of private property considered as a primary goal of socialism, if not its defining characteristic, thus near total collectivization and nationalization of the means of production;
- low respect for privacy, extensive control of the party over private life;
- low respect for intellectual property as knowledge and culture was considered a right for human kind, and not a privilege as in the free market economies.
- extensive social warrants of the state (the rights to a job, free education, free healthcare, retirement at 60 for men and 55 for women, maternity leave, free disability benefits and sick leave compensation, subsidies to multichildren families, ...) in return for a high degree of social mobilization.
- the judicial process lacks adversary character; public prosecution is considered as "provider of justice."
A specific institution characteristic to Socialist law was the so-called burlaw court (or, verbally, "court of comrades", Russian товарищеский суд) which decided on minor offences.
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“If we justify war, it is because all peoples always justify the traits of which they find themselves possessed, not because war will bear an objective examination of its merits.”
—Ruth Benedict (18871948)