The Reform of Local Court of 1912 in Imperial Dimension: The Making of Common Institutes in Plural Society
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The judicial reform of 1912, which recreated in the inner and western provinces of the Russian Empire
an updated version of the magistrates’ court (mirovoy sud) and liquidated the judicial functions of land captains
and other judicial-administrative instances, is usually studied either in the historic-legal context or as part
of political struggles of the early twentieth century. For the first time, the reform was considered in the context of
managing imperial diversity and strategies of creating common institutions in conditions of heterogeneity (class,
ethnic, confessional, political), both among the population of the empire as a whole and in regional and local
communities. This paper addresses the state of local justice and factors that necessitated reforms, Including
main positions that formed the basis for criticizing the government bill and alternative options for local courts.
Positions in the discussion were related to visions of prospects and ways for integrating the Russian Empire, constructing
common institutions, and nation building. The resulting model was a compromise and hybrid. A number
of developed elements of local courts were in demand after the fall of the empire, even in the Soviet period.
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Verniaev I. I. ‘The Reform of Local Court of 1912 in Imperial Dimension: The Making of Common Institutes in Plural Society’, Modern History of Russia, vol. 8, no. 4, 2018, pp. 966–982.