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ARBITRARINESS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   104057


Helpless imperialists: European state workers in Soviet Central Asia in the 1920s and 1930s / Kassymbekova, Botakoz   Journal Article
Kassymbekova, Botakoz Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract This article examines everyday realities of the state-building process in early Soviet Tajikistan. The work concentrates exclusively on the experiences of 'European' state workers, that is, their uncertain position as 'imperialists', and points to nuances of the early Soviet state building. By observing the mundane micro-level experiences of the state actors from the European parts of the Soviet Union in Central Asia, the author proposes to treat sentiments of state actors as important indicators of the Soviet statehood practices and poses the following question: why did the European state workers feel isolated, unsupported and even helpless and how can we understand their experiences as an integral part of the Soviet empire state-building process? The author argues that individuals' power and powerlessness was at the core of the early Soviet political structure since individual state representatives were to palliate institutional and legal deficiencies - a task that required enormous physical and emotional sacrifices and also included personal responsibility for anything that might have been deemed by the top as a failure.
Key Words State Building  Arbitrariness  Helplessness  Imperialism 
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2
ID:   114761


Rule of law: an unruly horse? some reflections on its application in India / Sorabjee, Soli J   Journal Article
Sorabjee, Soli J Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract It may not be possible to define Rule of Law with scientific precision but it cannot be dismissed as an elusive notion or as an unruly horse. Rule of Law is the heritage of all mankind because its underlying rationale is belief in the human rights and human dignity of all individuals everywhere in the world. It needs to be emphasised that there is nothing western or eastern or northern or southern about the concept of Rule of Law. It has a global reach and dimension. Rule of Law symbolises the quest of civilised democratic societies, be they eastern or western, to combine that degree of liberty without which law is tyranny with that degree of law without which liberty becomes licence. It is entrenched in India to the extent that the Rule of Law cannot be abolished even by a constitutional amendment.
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