Role of supreme courts in ensuring uniform judicial practice: trends in the post-Soviet space

Cover Page

Cite item

Full Text

Open Access Open Access
Restricted Access Access granted
Restricted Access Subscription Access

Abstract

Due to various factors, states choose different approaches to ensuring uniform judicial practice, which is a necessary component of legal certainty. While in the common law countries judicial precedent has been a trusted tool for this task, in socialist countries lower courts would follow the guiding clarifications of the top judicial bodies. Following the collapse of the USSR, three separate trends took shape in the 1990s – 2000s: statutory establishment and detailed description of the guiding (and even obligatory) role of clarifications made on relevant issues by the plenary body of the apex court, decrease of importance of such clarifications to a role of simple recommendations and complete abolishment of such an instrument.

Having studied the legislative changes in post-Soviet countries, we may conclude that due to the inevitable role of the apex court as a beacon of judicial practice, abandoning clarifications on issues of judicial practice increases the significance of that court’s decisions in individual cases, which effectively introduces elements of stare decisis into a country’s legal system.

Full Text

Restricted Access

About the authors

Georgy A. Borisov

Supreme Court of the Russian Federation

Author for correspondence.
Email: gborisov.law@yandex.ru
ORCID iD: 0000-0003-3117-1358

Сounsellor of the International Cooperation Department

Russian Federation, Moscow

References

  1. Morozova, L. A. Legal certainty as a common universal principle of realization of law. Social’no-ekonomicheskie yavleniya i process = Social and Economic Processes. 2017;(3):250-256. (In Russ.)
  2. Bratus’, S. N., Vengerov, A. B. Notion, contents and form of judicial practice. In: S. N. Bratus’, ed. Judicial practice in the Soviet legal system. Moscow; 1975. 328 р. (In Russ.)
  3. Lazarev, V. V. Application of Soviet law. Ed. B. S. Volkov. Kazan: Kazan University; 1972. 200 р. (In Russ.)
  4. Mokichev, K. A., ed. History of the Soviet Prosecution in the most important documents. Moscow: Gosyurizdat; 1952. 583 p. (In Russ.)
  5. Pobedkin, A. V. Rulings of the Plenary Session of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation as a form of interpreting and filling the gaps in criminal procedure law. Gosudarstvo i pravo = State and Law. 2008;(11):34-44. (In Russ.)
  6. Momotov, V. V. Interpretation of legal norms by the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation in the context of the modern legal system. Gosudarstvo i pravo = State and Law. 2018;(4):30-39. (In Russ.)
  7. Ryazanov, K. K., Bevz, L. V. Notion and essence of legal positions. Vestnik Volgogradskoj akademii MVD Rossii = Herald of Volgograd Academy of Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs. 2019;(4):19-24. (In Russ.)
  8. Momotov, V. V. Role of judicial practice in the legal system: Russian experience in the global context. Zhurnal zarubezhnogo zakonodatel’stva i sravnitel’nogo pravovedeniya = Journal of Foreign Legislation and Comparative Legal Studies. 2017;(5):40-49. (In Russ.)
  9. MacCormick, D. N., Summers, R. S., eds. Interpreting precedents: a comparative study. Sydney: Ashgate; 1997. 585 p.
  10. Bergel, J.-L. General theory of law. Moscow: NOTA BENE; 2000. 576 p. (In Russ.)

Supplementary files

Supplementary Files
Action
1. JATS XML

Согласие на обработку персональных данных

 

Используя сайт https://journals.rcsi.science, я (далее – «Пользователь» или «Субъект персональных данных») даю согласие на обработку персональных данных на этом сайте (текст Согласия) и на обработку персональных данных с помощью сервиса «Яндекс.Метрика» (текст Согласия).