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C - Civil Code of the Russian Federation (Part I 1994/Part II 1996)

from PART 3 - Recent legislation on liability law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 May 2011

Gert Brüggemeier
Affiliation:
Universität Bremen
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Summary

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(with the Additions and Amendments of February 20, August 12, 1996, October 24, 1997, July 8, December 17, 1999, April 16, May 15, November 26, 2001, March 21, November 14, 26, 2002, January 10, March 26, November 11, December 23, 2003)

Part I: Chapter 8. Non-material values and their protection

Article 150. Non-material values

  1. Life and health, personal dignity and personal immunity, honour and good name, business reputation, immunity of private life, personal and family confidentiality, the right to free movement, to the choice of the place of abode and residence, the right to the name, copyright and other personal non-property rights and non-material values possessed by a citizen since his birth or by force of the law shall be inalienable and untransferable in any other way. In the instances and in conformity with the procedure stipulated by the law, personal non-property rights and other non-material values possessed by the deceased person may be exercised and protected by other persons, including the heirs of their legal owner.

  2. Non-material values shall be protected in conformity with the present Code and with other laws in the instances and procedure provided for by them, and also in those instances and within those limits in which the use of the means of protecting civil rights (Art. 12) follow from the substance of the violated non-material right and from the nature of the consequences of this violation.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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References

Wölk, C. S., Das Deliktsrecht Rußlands (Frankfurt am Main: Lang, 2003)Google Scholar
Osakwe, C., in Russian Civil Code. Parts 1–3: Text and Analysis (Moscow: Wolters Kluwer, 2008), pp. 177–320Google Scholar
Berry, D. D., ‘Tort Law, Including the Tort Liability of the State’ in Simons, W. (ed.), Private and Civil Law in the Russian Federation (Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff, 2009), pp. 211CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rakhmilovich, A. V., ‘The Protection of Honor, Dignity, and Business Reputation under the RF Civil Code: Problems and Judicial Enforcement’ in Simons, W. (ed.), Private and Civil Law in the Russian Federation (Leiden: Martinus Nijhoff, 2009) p. 231CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harland, D., ‘The United Nations Guidelines for Consumer Protection10 (1987) J Consum Policy245CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourgoignie, T. (ed.), Consumer Protection in Russia: Proceedings of a Conference Held in Moscow Dec. 1994 (Louvain-la-Neuve: Centre de Droit de la Consommation, 1995)
Reich, N., ‘Consumer Protection in Countries of Emerging Markets: The Example of Russia’, 19 (1996) J Consum Policy1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Treadwell, A. B. and Pridemore, W. A., ‘Purchasing Power: Consumer Empowerment and Adaptation to the Free Market in Russia27 (2004) J Consum Policy451CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaser, M. and Knütel, R., Römisches Privatrecht (19th edn., Munich: C. H. Beck, 2008), §42Google Scholar

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