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Property rights in Post-Soviet Russia : violence, corruption, and the demand for law

Title
Property rights in Post-Soviet Russia : violence, corruption, and the demand for law / Jordan Gans-Morse, Northwestern University, Illinois.
ISBN
9781107153967 (hardback)
1107153964 (hardback)
Publication
Cambridge, United Kingdom : Cambridge University Press, 2017.
Copyright Notice Date
©2017.
Physical Description
xii, 298 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Summary
The effectiveness of property rights - and the rule of law more broadly - is often depicted as depending primarily on rulers' 'supply' of legal institutions. Yet the crucial importance of private sector zdemandy for law is frequently overlooked. This book develops a novel framework that unpacks the demand for law in Russia, building on an original enterprise survey as well as extensive interviews with lawyers, firms, and private security agencies. By tracing the evolution of firms' reliance on violence, corruption, and law over the two decades following the Soviet Union's collapse, the book clarifies why firms in various contexts may turn to law for property rights protection, even if legal institutions remain ineffective or corrupt. The author's detailed demand-side analysis of property rights draws attention to the extensive role that law plays in the Russian business world, contrary to frequent depictions of Russia as lawless. -- Provided by publisher.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
August 28, 2017
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 275-292) and index.
Contents
Violence, corruption, and demand for law
Institutional supply and demand
The evolution of firm strategies
The role of state legal capacity
Demand-side barriers to the use of legal strategies
The effectiveness of illegal strategies
Variation in strategies across firms
Firms, States, and the Rule of Law in comparative perspective.
Citation

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