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Eastern European societies underwent large-scale deprivations of property by the authoritarian regimes, beginning after World War II, largely ending with the last waves of the kolkhoz movement in the early 1960s. This book examines property reparations that took place after 1989.
Explores and illustrates how domestic and international factors shape the direction of democratization process with special reference to constitution making process in Turkey. This book describes how all five Turkish constitutions were, by and large, the products of indigenous effort, although borrowing could be felt in certain limited areas.
This book examines constitutional adjudication in the Visegrad Four: Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia. The creation of constitutional courts was one of major milestones in the re-creation of the democratic system in these countries.
This is an examination of administrative law and institutions in Central and Eastern Europe. In a series of case studies, discussing each country in the region in turn, it looks at the ways a range of administrative decisions are reached and at how the citizens affected by them are treated.
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