Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 23 – The most
important “import substitution” now going on in Russia is not the replacement
of foreign foods and medicines with domestically produced ones but the
replacement of European legal norms with Soviet legal ideas and the strengthening
of religious and other traditional social regulators, according to Rasul
Kadiyev.
And that in turn means, the North
Caucasus analyst writes in “Kavkazskaya politika,” that some regions in Russia
will begin to elaborate their own legal principles, including Islamic ones,
that will oppose and be opposed by the newly independent Russian ideas and
practices (kavpolit.com/articles/pravozameschenie_ot_evropejskij_jurisdiktsii_k_tra-13275/).
With the end of the Soviet Union, he
points out, “the Russian Federation became a consumer of European law since
this was profitable both economically and politically. Most of its new laws
were even reviewed in the Council of Europe, and thus “from the Soviet
jurisdiction, [Russia] passed into the European one.”
“But in 2013, the price of oil was
no longer 13 US dollars as it had been in 1998 when Russia ratified the
European Convention on the Defense of Rights and Basic Freedoms, but more than
110 US dollars, and disagreements between Russia and Europe became much
greater, Kadiyev says.
Russians, “as ‘consumers’” of
European law, “began to express dissatisfaction with the services of the
European jurisdiction,” not only the large number of Russian losses in the European
Human Rights Courts but also the decisions of other European courts against
Russian companies.
By 2012,
he continues, “calls began to appear to make the Russian legal system independent”
of the European one. And differences with Europe over Ukraine have only
intensified these appeals and now have prompted the justice ministry to prepare
legislation that would effectively end Russia’s participation in a common
European legal space.
In an explanatory note attached to
the draft law issued at the end of last year, Kadiyev says, the ministry
specified that the law will “make possible the strengthening of the legal
position of the state and security strategic national interests,” a declaration
that puts Russia at odds with European definitions.
By making the state and its security
rather than the rights of the individual central, he continues, the draft law represents
“a return to the materialist Soviet principle that ‘law is the embodiment of
the will of the ruling class,’ while the basis of European legal culture is
that normative acts must correspond to legal principles.”
Because the new legislation allows
for adopting measures to implement European rules in Russia, “this is still not
an exit from the Council of Europe but it is already a proposal to violate the conditions
which are obligatory for joining this organization.”
That has enormous consequences not
only between Russia and Europe but also within the Russian Federation because
in the latter case, it opens the way for a return to traditional legal norms
and even “legal separatism” under the terms of which one region or another,
drawing on its distinctive cultural background, can adopt different laws than
others have.
“If the Russian Federation enters on
the course of legal sovereignty apart from the European jurisdiction,” Kadiyev
says, “and as the basis of its ‘separatism’ puts the defense of ‘traditional
values,’ then this in the first instance will lead to a review of the domestic
legal space in favor of the regional component.”
That will not necessarily lead to
political separatism, he argues, but it will give the regimes in the North
Caucasus “a chance to create a high quality and competitive legal field” on the
basis of its Islamic past and thus lead to “the gradual legalization of Islamic
institutions of law and economics.”
In the near term, however, there
is a problem, Kadiyev says. “Just as one cannot instantly restore the
production of goods” one had been importing, so too “it is impossible to create
in regions new Russian legal specialists” who are capable of producing high
quality legislation rather than just copying legislation “sent down ‘from
Moscow.’”
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