Abstract

The subject of the study is to present the genesis and development of legal regulations, which create the so-called honorary responsibility. It included improper behavior of soldiers and officers of uniformed services both during and outside the performance of official duties, and the basis for such regulation was the legislator’s desire to protect the personal goods of the armed forces, both the armed forces and individual uniformed services. The analysis of the relevant pragmatic regulations proved that this particular type of responsibility was initially borne only by the officers of the armed forces and uniformed services, and only at the end of the 1950 -s the legislator extended it to all soldiers and officers, in order to completely reverse this tendency after about half a century by taking over of these behaviors with classic disciplinary responsibility

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