Copyright, Defamation, and Privacy in Soviet Civil Law: De Lege Lata Ac Ferenda, 22. sējumsMonograph commenting on civil law with respect to defamation, privacy and copyright in the USSR - comprises relevant jurisprudence regarding private sector writings, protection of personal image, freedom of press, etc. References. |
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Saturs
INTRODUCTORY REMARKS | 3 |
PROTECTION CONSISTS IN RESTORATION | 15 |
THE COURT MAY IMPOSE FINES FOR NON | 23 |
B The Statements must be Defamatory to the Honour | 30 |
The Statements Circulated by Defendant must be | 57 |
QUESTION OF FAULT STATUTE OF LIMITA | 65 |
PROTECTION OF HONOUR AND DIGNITY | 114 |
B Defamation before Peoples Courts and before Com | 120 |
THE SOVIET PRESS vs SECTION 7 DEFAMA | 127 |
USE OF SECTION 7 AGAINST FOREIGN JOUR | 151 |
INTRODUCTORY REMARKS | 181 |
ABOUT THE AUTHOR | 489 |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
according action actual added addressee alleged appears apply arts Beliavskii brought circulation cited citizens Civil Code civil law claimed committee concept connected consent Constitution contained copyright law correspondence court criminal death decision defamation defamatory defendant diaries edit effect existence expressed fact Fleishits given hand heirs honour and dignity Ibid individual injury instance interests intimate Ioffe Izvestiia judge July jurisprudence jurists Kazakh legislation letters libel literary means moral Moscow nature newspaper norms object one's opinion organisations original Party plaintiff possessed posthumous practice Pravo Pridvorov Principles private writings Procedure property rights protection publication published question referred regard relating relationships remained Report retraction RSFSR rules Russian Section 491 Section 514 socialist society Soviet Soviet jurists Soviet law specific statements statutes suit supra tort union USSR Uzbek violation written York