Dyskusja na temat miejsca prawa rodzinnego w systemie prawa Polski Ludowej

Authors

  • Piotr Fiedorczyk

Keywords:

Family law, codification, Soviet law

Abstract

After World War II Polish law was based on law of the USSR. Family law played important role in the reception of Soviet law, because it was the first example of applying Soviet rules. According to Soviet doctrine and legislation, family law was treated as an independent branch of law, separated from civil law. The construction of private law was rejected. The process of adapting Soviet rules started in 1949, when Polish and Czechoslovak lawyers were working together on draft of Family Code. No one of important Polish lawyers supported the idea of separation of family law from civil law at the beginning of works. Later they were forced to change their views and some of them (especially Seweryn Szer) supported the idea of separation of family law strongly. In the late 50’s the discussion about localization of family law was very emotional and open. It was the result of changing political situation (fall of the Stalinism). However, there was no political consent to prepare one civil code and that’s why two codes were passed in 1964: Family and Guardianship Code and Civil Code. The reception of Soviet rules in Polish family law was superficial. According to the prevailing opinion, the existence of separate Family code did not create independent branch of law and family law was regarded as a part of civil law. The supporters of the idea of separation were not able to construct the convincing theory about it. Present attempts to retain separated family code have no historical justification.

Downloads

Published

2009-01-01

How to Cite

Dyskusja na temat miejsca prawa rodzinnego w systemie prawa Polski Ludowej. (2009). Miscellanea Historico-Iuridica, 7, 153-173. https://miscellanea.uwb.edu.pl/article/view/358

Similar Articles

1-10 of 345

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 3 > >>