I. MARXIST APPROACHES TO LAW IN TIMES OF THE POLISH PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC AND THE GERMAN DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC AND PHILOSOPHY OF LAW IN THE FACE OF TOTALITARIANISM
Dr hab. Joanna Helios, prof. UWr
Dr hab. Wioletta Jedlecka, prof. UWr
The influence of Marxism on the interpretation of law in Poland (some remarks concerning the theory of legal interpretation by Jerzy Wroblewski)
Dr hab. Martyna Łaszewska-Hellriegel, prof. UZ
Animal welfare under socialism: Anthropocentrism, instrumentalization, and ideology in the GDR
Dr hab. Sławomir Tkacz, prof. UŚ
Dr hab. Aleksandra Wentkowska, prof. UŚ
On the threats to democracy and the rule of law: The philosophy of total states in the views of Szymon Rundstein and Maciej Starzewski
II. CRIMINAL-LAW SETTLING OF ACCOUNTS WITH COMMUNISM
Mgr Przemysław Pasierb
The establishment of the Institute of National Remembrance as the authority responsible for prosecuting communist and Nazi crimes: An analysis of the efficiency of the IPN Act
Prof. dr hab. Adam Bosiacki
Attempts to punish communist crimes throughout history: Failures and successes
Dr hab. Dominik Bierecki, prof. UP w Słupsku
The notion of activities for the independent existence of the Polish State on the basis of the so-called February Act
Dr Marek Derlatka
Denying communist crimes: Selected problems
Mgr Kamil Słomiński
Criminalization of communist propaganda in the jurisprudence of the Supreme Court of the Second Republic of Poland
III. SYSTEMIC CRIME FROM THE POINTS OF VIEW OF INTERNATIONAL LAW AND PHILOSOPHY AND THEORY OF LAW
Prof. dr hab. Jacek Sobczak
Dr hab. Ksenia Kakareko, prof. UW
Dr hab. Maria Gołda-Sobczak, prof. UAM
The forgotten genocide: Extermination of the Crimean Tatars
Dr hab. Christoph-Eric Mecke, prof. UZ
Finding legal approaches to dealing with the past after the fall of communism from the perspective of legal theory and comparative law
Dr Kajetan Górny
Evaluation of the protests in Radom in 1976 from the perspective of Law & Economics