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The Origins of Modern Russian Labor Legislation in the Post-Petrine Era (1725–1785)

https://doi.org/10.17803/1729-5920.2025.226.9.033-043

Abstract

   This study employs historical-legal, comparative-historical, and formal-legal analysis to investigate the formation of the foundations of modern Russian labor law during the post-Petrine period (1725–1785). Although separated in time from the present, this era was pivotal in establishing early institutions, legal constructs, and regulatory approaches governing hired subordinate labor. 18th-century labor legislation introduced notable methodological innovations, foremost among them the positivization of legal norms, whereby prescriptive rules acquired binding statutory form. A parallel development was the entrenchment of public-law principles in the regulation of labor relations. Pre-Petrine statehood largely refrained from intervening in the contractual relationship between an employer and an employee, maintaining a civil-law model of consensual hiring. In contrast, the post-Petrine legal landscape began to embody the defining characteristic of contemporary Russian labor law — a synthesis of private- and public-law principles. Key legal institutions codified in this period foreshadowed present-day labor protections, including guarantees for wages, limits on working hours, safety standards, prohibitions on arbitrary punishment, rules on wage deductions, formalized workplace discipline, and the recognition of localized norm-setting authority. The analysis reveals structural continuities between the 18th century and the present, particularly in enduring regulatory weaknesses: ineffective enforcement of enacted norms, inadequate labor-law awareness among the workforce, and deficient mechanisms of oversight and compliance control.

About the Author

N. V. Demidov
Tomsk State University of Control Systems and Radioelectronics
Russian Federation

Nikolai V. Demidov, Cand. Sci. (Law), Associate Professor, Associate Professor at the Department

Law Institute; Department of Labor Law and Social Security Law

Tomsk



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For citations:


Demidov N.V. The Origins of Modern Russian Labor Legislation in the Post-Petrine Era (1725–1785). Lex Russica. 2025;78(9):33-43. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.17803/1729-5920.2025.226.9.033-043

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ISSN 1729-5920 (Print)
ISSN 2686-7869 (Online)