Abstract

Abstract The contribution of Bernard Rudden to Soviet law scholarship is enormous. One area in which this scholarship has made itself known is the field of insurance law. In 1966, Rudden published his monograph, Soviet Insurance Law,1 which was a systematic survey of the insurance law of the then Soviet Union. In that work, Rudden made a number of arguments relating to insurance law in the Soviet Union, arguments which drew attention to deficiencies in that law. The present chapter takes as its subject the insurance law of post-Soviet Russia. Much has happened in Russia since 1966, and insurance law has changed as a result. The collapse of the Communist ideal and the transition to the market economy have yielded reforms of insurance law, in both formal and substantive terms. However, the deficiencies remain.

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