правові норми

Regulatory and legal regulation of public-private partnership in Ukraine

Statement of the problem. The importance of public-private partnerships requires substantiated regulatory and legal regulation in accordance with the need for high-quality and full cooperation between the state and private business with the highest effect. Therefore, the study of the role of legal regulation of public-private partnership in Ukraine is extremely relevant in the new conditions of development of Ukrainian society, given the challenges it is facing today.

Legal regulation of social security of judges in the conditions of Ukraine's european integration: trends of further development

It is noted that today the sphere of social security of judges in Ukraine is characterized by the following areas: 1) adaptation of European standards and experience of foreign countries in the legislation on the judiciary and the status of judges of Ukraine; 2) increase in judges' salaries by cutting social guarantees; 3) reduction of the content and volume of social security of the judiciary; 4) the transition of the state from the predominance of in-kind social security (due primarily to benefits and guarantees) to cash security.

The right of social security as a national law

Ukraine, having become the path of independence and the construction of a lawgoverned
state, directed its activities on the formation of national law. From here, the study of
the problems of the formation and development of such a branch of law as social security is
one of the main tasks of the legal science. This is due to the fact that, through the norms of this
industry, the realization of the most important social rights by a person and a citizen takes
place. In addition, the successful resolution of the tasks of law-making and law-enforcement

Denationalization of printed press in ukraine: historical background

The topicality of the research is, first and foremost, caused by the active process of transition from industrial to information-oriented society, which can be observed throughout the world and which is impossible without independent mass media. Those countries with a longer history of democracy do not have mass media fully owned by the state, except for those that broadcast and print only statistical data, because the underlying principle of the European democracy is that the government is not entitled to carry on propaganda for its own people.