
The Aims and Discussions of the Foundation of Land Reform in Estonia After the WWI
Author(s) -
Marju Luts-Sootak,
Karin Visnapuu
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
juridiskā zinātne
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2592-9364
pISSN - 1691-7677
DOI - 10.22364/jull.14.07
Subject(s) - estonian , parliament , land reform , expropriation , legislature , redistribution (election) , political science , independence (probability theory) , scope (computer science) , public administration , period (music) , law , agriculture , politics , geography , philosophy , linguistics , statistics , mathematics , archaeology , programming language , physics , computer science , acoustics
The land reform was one of the most important tasks of independent Estonia after World War I. The groundwork started even before gaining its independence which shows the significance of this extensive reform. Similar reforms were carried out in other Eastern- and Middle-European countries after World War I, but the Estonian land reform was considered to be among the most radical ones at that time period. The decisions about the scope, intensity and the radicality of a reform would influence the later outcome, therefore it is important to understand the legislative discussions in the beginning and during the reform. In the article we will examine the legislative discussions of Estonian Constituent Assembly and Parliament about the expropriation of largescale estates in Estonia, the legal solutions and, consequently, the reasons why the question about compensation and redistribution of the expropriated land was left unregulated in the Land Reform Act.