• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site
  • HSE University
  • Student Theses
  • Restriction of the Civil Rights of Business Entities in the Sphere of Trade and Transport Services of the Population (on the Example of Municipal Legal Acts of Local Governments)

Restriction of the Civil Rights of Business Entities in the Sphere of Trade and Transport Services of the Population (on the Example of Municipal Legal Acts of Local Governments)

Student: Skripka Evgeniya

Supervisor: Irina V. Mikheeva

Faculty: Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities (Perm)

Educational Programme: Legal Support and Protection of Business (Master)

Final Grade: 9

Year of Graduation: 2020

The final qualification work is devoted to the identification and analysis of violations of civil rights of business entities in the areas of trade and transport services of the population, allowed by local authorities when adopting legal acts. The identification and analysis of such violations is necessary to improve the system of legal regulation of local self-government bodies and their interaction with economic entities.

Full text (added May 13, 2020)

Student Theses at HSE must be completed in accordance with the University Rules and regulations specified by each educational programme.

Summaries of all theses must be published and made freely available on the HSE website.

The full text of a thesis can be published in open access on the HSE website only if the authoring student (copyright holder) agrees, or, if the thesis was written by a team of students, if all the co-authors (copyright holders) agree. After a thesis is published on the HSE website, it obtains the status of an online publication.

Student theses are objects of copyright and their use is subject to limitations in accordance with the Russian Federation’s law on intellectual property.

In the event that a thesis is quoted or otherwise used, reference to the author’s name and the source of quotation is required.

Search all student theses