The article examines the law and statehood of the Slavic peoples as a subject of integrated historical-legal and comparative-legal analysis within the emerging field of legal Slavistics. It substantiates the need to develop a common doctrinal framework capable of linking the study of sources of law and traditional institutions of public authority with the analysis of contemporary mechanisms of legal certainty, contractual forms of performing public functions, and international legal procedures for the protection of rights and the settlement of disputes. It is shown that engaging with the Slavic legal heritage is important not only for reconstructing historical models of regulation, but also for understanding patterns of politico-legal development, criteria of legitimacy, and the sustainability of legal order amid integration processes and cross-border interaction. The article concludes that a methodological combination of comparative-law, formal-legal, and normative-legal approaches is warranted, while maintaining neutral academic presentation and respect for the spiritual and moral foundations of legal culture in a spirit of conciliarity.
Sergey Nikolaevich Khrameshin (Fri,) studied this question.