TY - JOUR TI - Federal Ideas in Russian Constituional Law Studies in the Second Half of the XIXth Century T2 - IS - AB - Problems of a federative form of state acquired relevance in the Russian constitutional law studies inthe 2nd half of the 19th century. In general, the federation was interpreted as a union of states (quasistates),in which its units were subject to the power of the federal government in certain areas (withinthe limits outlined by the federal constitution), while maintaining the autonomy in other areas. Thus,the origin of the federative state was seen as a process of strengthening the centripetal power in confederation,but not as a decentralization of a unitary state. At the turn of 19-20th centuries, the mainproblems of legal theory of federation became such issues as sharing sovereignty and legal status of the constituent units under the influence of German lawyers (especially G. Jellinek). At the same time,B. Chicherin and A. Gradovsky, who are outstanding Russian legal scholars of the 2nd half of the 19thcentury, did not consider the question of the legal status of the component units of the federation as apivotal issue for federative theory. They considered federalism as a guarantee of the decentralizationof public authority (A. Gradovsky) or fragmentation and distribution of government’s power in variouspolitical bodies (B. Chicherin). However, the decentralization conception of federative ideas containedin works of Gradovsky and Chicherin was relegated to the background of Russian constitutional lawstudies by union conception of the federative state with its problems of sovereignty and the legal statusof the constituent units of the federation. AU - Anton Lebedev UR - https://law-journal.hse.ru/en/2015--4/171412302.html PY - 2015 SP - 70-90 VL -