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<title>Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Iuridica 2019/89</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/11089/31150</link>
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<pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 14:43:08 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-05T14:43:08Z</dc:date>
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<title>Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Iuridica 2019/89</title>
<url>https://dspace.uni.lodz.pl:443/bitstream/id/b48caeb1-9b3e-4b4b-a725-658428981e8b/</url>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/11089/31150</link>
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<title>The Politics of Limitation of Claims in Poland: Post-Communist Ideology, Neoliberalism and the Plight of Uninformed Debtors</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/11089/33611</link>
<description>The Politics of Limitation of Claims in Poland: Post-Communist Ideology, Neoliberalism and the Plight of Uninformed Debtors
Kuźmicka-Sulikowska, Joanna
The text will present arguments raised by the supporters of two different positions&amp;nbsp;regarding the manner of taking into account the expiry of the limitation period, namely those that&amp;nbsp;are supposed to speak in favor of taking this circumstance by the courts ex officio, and those which&amp;nbsp;prevail to take it into account only in the event of raising the plea of limitation by the one against&amp;nbsp;whom the claim is due. Against this background, a polemical analysis will be made with these&amp;nbsp;arguments, including inquiries about interests of which entities or social groups are implemented&amp;nbsp;and protected for each of these solutions. It will be shown that some of the arguments put forward&amp;nbsp;actually emphasize that the institution of limitation is to serve not so much as a party involved in&amp;nbsp;a given claim (creditors or debtors), but rather institutions of the judiciary. It will also be shown that&amp;nbsp;the solution currently in force in Polish civil law, within which the taking into account of the fact&amp;nbsp;that a given claim is time-barred is possible only if the one against whom the claim is entitled raises&amp;nbsp;the relevant claim of limitation, in fact prefers only the more affluent and better educated social&amp;nbsp;strata, deepening the social exclusion of those who, due to, for example, worse property status, do&amp;nbsp;not have the necessary knowledge, nor can afford to take advantage of legal aid. The latter, in effect,&amp;nbsp;often do not plead the expiration of limitation period, because they do not know that they are entitled&amp;nbsp;to it (in general, or are unable to assess when the claim became due, at which point the limitation&amp;nbsp;period began or has ended). Polish civil law is a good example here for considering, firstly, that in&amp;nbsp;the 20th century the regulations concerning the limitation of claims were changed several times, and&amp;nbsp;each time a discussion on how to consider the expiry of the limitation period came to life (which&amp;nbsp;provides rich argumentation with which one can confront) and also because historical and political&amp;nbsp;entanglements play a significant role here. Namely, the text will show that the main resistance against&amp;nbsp;taking into account the expiration of limitation period ex officio (which is a solution that protects&amp;nbsp;the poorer people who can not afford legal assistance) is due to the fact that this solution, which&amp;nbsp;was in force in the original version of the current Polish Civil Code, was modeled on the solutions&amp;nbsp;of Soviet law. This means that after the political change in Poland in 1989, it was automatically&amp;nbsp;attempted to eliminate it, and replace it with a solution used in European countries, where only if&amp;nbsp;the one against whom the claim is entitled raises the relevant claim of limitation, even without any&amp;nbsp;reflection on the substantive legitimacy of such a change and without analyzing the practical social&amp;nbsp;effects of a solution, within which the expiry of the limitation period only is taking into account on&amp;nbsp;when relevant plea is raised, not ex officio.&amp;nbsp;Immersion of considerations in the realities of Polish law will also allow to show interests that&amp;nbsp;have recently clashed on the occasion of the regulation of electronic writ-of-payment proceedings.&amp;nbsp;In this example, it will be shown that despite the legislator making certain facade measures to&amp;nbsp;protect the interests of people with less legal awareness and poorer, who can not afford to get help&amp;nbsp;from a lawyer, in fact, many gates have been left, which question the reality of striving for such&amp;nbsp;protection, because they allow to sue for the claim after the expiration of the limitation period in&amp;nbsp;this proceeding.&amp;nbsp;In this context, the latest change in Polish civil law in this area was also discussed, that is, the&amp;nbsp;Act of April 13, 2018. On the basis of this Act, there has been a return to taking into account the&amp;nbsp;expiration of the limitation period ex officio, but only if the entrepreneur sue the consumer. In the&amp;nbsp;remaining scope, a solution was left within which the expiry of the limitation period is taking into&amp;nbsp;account only when relevant plea is raised.
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<pubDate>Sun, 29 Dec 2019 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2019-12-29T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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<title>Pedagogies of the Poor: Resisting Resilience in Eastern Europe and Beyond</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/11089/33610</link>
<description>Pedagogies of the Poor: Resisting Resilience in Eastern Europe and Beyond
Reid, Julian
This article illustrates the different ways in which the poor are being put to work,&amp;nbsp;in defence of a global neoliberal order by global economic institutions concerned with constructing&amp;nbsp;them as resilient subjects, as well as by opponents of neoliberalism concerned with galvanizing&amp;nbsp;the revolutionary potentials of poor people. In spite of the apparent gulf between neoliberalism&amp;nbsp;and its revolutionary opponents, the poor find themselves subject to remarkably similar strategies&amp;nbsp;of construction by both proponents and opponents of neoliberalism today. This predicament of the&amp;nbsp;poor is particularly vexed in Eastern Europe where strategies of resilience are fast developing, and&amp;nbsp;critical legal theory has so far offered little resistance to this trend. Turning against this tide, this&amp;nbsp;article considers how we might reimagine poverty and conceive its politics beyond and against&amp;nbsp;clichéd images of the poor as resilient subjects. Through an analysis of the work of the Hungarian&amp;nbsp;filmmaker Bela Tarr, it argues for the necessity of images capable of conveying the intolerability&amp;nbsp;of the conditions in which the poor continue to live, as well as the contingency of those conditions;&amp;nbsp;images that serve as interventions on narratives which would reduce the poor to a life of mere&amp;nbsp;resilience.
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<pubDate>Sun, 29 Dec 2019 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2019-12-29T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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<title>Ideology in Modern Russian Constitutional Practice</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/11089/33612</link>
<description>Ideology in Modern Russian Constitutional Practice
Rudt, Yulia
The article focuses on Russian constitutional ideology with overview of its historical&amp;nbsp;preconditions and analysis of recent significant cases of the Russian Constitutional Court. There&amp;nbsp;is a discussion of gay activist Alekseyev’s case and “foreign agents’ law” case in constitutional&amp;nbsp;practice as most significant examples of positivistic way of legal reasoning.&amp;nbsp;The paper argues that legal positivism through its form – legal formalism is the main ideology&amp;nbsp;in the modern constitutional practice in Russia. This ideology is based on the assumption that&amp;nbsp;constitutional justice can find social truth. German positivistic and Soviet Marxist views have&amp;nbsp;strongly determined the modern Russian constitutional discourse.
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<pubDate>Sun, 29 Dec 2019 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2019-12-29T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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<title>Delimiting Central Europe as a Juridical Space: A Preliminary Exercise in Critical Legal Geography</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/11089/33607</link>
<description>Delimiting Central Europe as a Juridical Space: A Preliminary Exercise in Critical Legal Geography
Mańko, Rafał
The aim of the present paper is to contribute to the on-going discussion, both in&amp;nbsp;legal theory and in comparative law, concerning the status of Central Europe and its delimitation&amp;nbsp;from other legal regions in Europe, notably Romano-Germanic Western Europe but also Eastern&amp;nbsp;Europe and Eurasia. The paper adopts the methodological perspective of critical legal geography,&amp;nbsp;understood as a strand of critical jurisprudence laying at the interstices of spatial justice studies,&amp;nbsp;critical geography, comparative law, sociology of law and legal history. The paper proceeds by&amp;nbsp;identifying the notion of Central Europe with reference to a specific list of countries, then proposes&amp;nbsp;a number of objective criteria for delimitng Central Europe and applies them in order to highlight&amp;nbsp;the difference between Central Europe and other adjacent legal regions. Following that, the paper&amp;nbsp;enquires as to whether Central Europe should be deemed to be a ‘legal family’, a ‘legal union’ or&amp;nbsp;simply a ‘legal space’ or ‘space of legal culture’.
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<pubDate>Sun, 29 Dec 2019 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2019-12-29T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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