Abstract

The subject. The relevance of the article is stipulated by the gap in the study of property and the state as a consistent system. The purpose of the article is to confirm or disprove the hypothesis that each way of organizing property such as private, mixed (corporate) and general (collective) potentially stimulates the existence of a certain state structure. The methodology. The author uses normative structuralism. This methodology is created by the author and is based on the idea that property as the main system-forming goal of the state’s existence genetically predetermines principles of rationing its structure. The main results of the research. Each way of organizing property in a particular social time period can acquire the quality of the main backbone in the organization structure of the state. Each way of organizing property provides proper social function: private way of organizing property provides function of social development; mixed (corporate) way provides function of social compromise (convergence); general (collective) way provides function of social security in the broadest sense. If private way of organizing property genetically programmed for the production and reproduction of social competition, mixed (corporate) and common (collective) ways are determined by the idea of its limitations and leveling. When the private way of organizing property becomes the main system-forming one it begins to fully stimulate the existence of a democratic structure of state organization. In turn, when mixed (corporate) and common (collective) ways of organizing property become the main system-forming ones, they stimulate the existence of a wide structural range of state functioning: from various regimes of democratic orientation to specific non-democratic regimes. Conclusions. The study of property as the main system-forming goal of the state existence through the normative structuralism concept allows us to conclude that that each way of organizing property stimulates the existence of a certain state structure.

Highlights

  • Introduction1991 is the year when the world's first socialist state, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, descended from the world political stage

  • Lessons from the Soviet times1991 is the year when the world's first socialist state, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, descended from the world political stage

  • The forcible elimination of the private way of organizing property and the monopoly of the forms of the general way of organizing it potentially stimulated the formation of such a structure of the Soviet state, through which the alienation of man from labor, property and power reached absolute values

Read more

Summary

Introduction

1991 is the year when the world's first socialist state, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, descended from the world political stage. The forcible elimination of the private way of organizing property and the monopoly of the forms of the general (collective) way of organizing it potentially stimulated the formation of such a structure of the Soviet state, through which the alienation of man from labor, property and power reached absolute values This is called " what we fought for, we ran into." The Soviet state in the truest sense destroyed the social interest of man to be a citizen, that is, to work freely, to have and dispose of his property freely, to choose his place of residence and occupation freely, to have and Express his opinion freely, to participate freely in the solution of state, municipal and public questions. We can Express our most sincere words of gratitude to our compatriots for their human wisdom and long-suffering, because they did not allow us to transform the peaceful collapse of the Soviet state into a disastrous civil war

The property and the state: at the beginning of the post-Soviet path
Issues of ownership in the Constitution of the Russian Federation 1993
Conclusions

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.