Abstract

In the conditions of permanent globalization and the steady formation of democratic trends in the development of the state and society, state law as a fundamental form of law has adopted a certain vector of displacement towards the cession of the «leading place» to non-state forms of law, such as individual and group law, as well as civil society law. The study of forms of law through the prism of theory and practice is conditioned by the development of democratic institutions of civil society, increasing the "self-governance" of citizens, increasing the importance of localized forms of social life; international consolidation and de facto recognition of the importance of individual rights and freedoms of citizens as fundamental values of public and state life and, finally, the accompanying consolidation of the ideas of humanism and democracy. The analysis of this phenomenon in the framework of a scientific article reveals both positive and negative aspects inherent in each of the forms of law, the author assesses their viability and prospects for development today.

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