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This volume provides a complete and authoritative English translation of Parts I, II, and III of the Russian Civil Code, which entered into force in complete form in March 2002. The Civil Code is the central document of market reforms in Russia, dealing with the law of persons (including companies), ownership, contract in all forms, tort, unjust enrichment, inheritance, and private international law. It has been translated from the Russian by Professor Butler, an acknowledged expert in the field, and benefits from a detailed article-by-article table of contents, a thorough subject-index to the Code, and a Russian-English glossary of civil law terms. An essential tool for any practitioner or student of Russian Law, Civil Code of the Russian Federation will be published alongside a collection of translated Russian Company and Commercial Legislation (0199261520) and the second edition of Professor Butler's acclaimed text on Russian Law (0199254001).
William E. Butler is Professor of Comparative Law at University College London, an Academician of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences, and Director of the Vinogradoff Institute, University College London. He was formerly Senior Partner of PricewaterhouseCoopers CIS Law Firm in Moscow, and continues to have a Moscow-based consultancy practice in Russian law.
PART ONE ; SECTION I: GENERAL PROVISIONS ; SECTION II: THE RIGHT OF OWNERSHIP AND OTHER RIGHTS TO A THING ; SECTION III: GENERAL PART OF THE LAW OF OBLIGATIONS ; PART TWO ; SECTION IV: INDIVIDUAL TYPES OF OBLIGATIONS ; PART THREE ; SECTION V: INHERITANCE LAW ; SECTION VI: INTERNATIONAL PRIVATE LAW ; FEDERAL LAW ON THE INTRODUCTION INTO OPERATION OF PART ONE OF THE CIVIL CODE OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION ; FEDERAL LAW ON THE INTRODUCTION INTO OPERATION OF PART TWO OF THE CIVIL CODE OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION ; FEDERAL LAW ON THE INTRODUCTION INTO OPERATION OF PART THREE OF THE CIVIL CODE OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION
William E. Butler needs no introduction to the community of academics and practitioners of Russian law...an excellent treatise on the subject...it would be a shortsighted librarian who would overlook these resources...no library on Russian law could possibly be considered complete without Butler's treatises.