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Edict on the Ministry of the Russian Federation for the Affairs of Crimea - Russia and the Republics Legal Materials - Second Series
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22290
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Originally from Russia and the Republics Legal Materials - Second Series
Preview Page By Edict of the President of the Russian Federation of 15 July 2015, No. 368, the Ministry of the Russian Federation for the Affairs of Crimea was abolished (point 1[a]) and its functions transferred to the Ministry of Economic Development of the Russian Federation – WEB]. For the purposes of enhancing the effectiveness of the activity of federal agencies of executive power with regard to the integration of the Republic Crimea and the City of Sevastopol into the economic, financial, credit, and legal system of the Russian Federation, I decree: 1. To form the Ministry of the Russian Federation for the Affairs of Crimea.
William E. Butler, Emeritus Professor of Comparative Law in the University of London, attached to University College London, is the John Edward Fowler Distinguished Professor of Law at the Dickinson School of Law, Pennsylvania State University, and Founder and Director of The Vinogradoff Institute.
An authority on the legal systems of Russia and former Soviet nations, he is the author, co-author, editor or translator of more than 3,500 books and articles on Russian, Soviet, Kazakhstan, Ukrainian, Uzbekistan, and other Commonwealth of Independent States legal systems. He has acted as Counsel to the EBRD, European Union, World Bank, United Nations, and Department for International Development of the United Kingdom on individual law reform projects.
The recipient of numerous honors for his service to Russian and international law, Professor Butler is Academician of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine and the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences, Associate of the International Academy of Comparative Law, and Member of the Russian Academy of Legal Sciences. He has been elected to his fourth term as a member of the Russian International Court of Commercial Arbitration. In 2003 Professor Butler was awarded the G. I. Tunkin Medal by the Russian International Law Association.
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