OCR
ABSTRACTS THE STATE'S EXPECTATIONS OF THE JUDICAL PROFESSION IN RESPECT OF THE HUNGARIAN DISCIPLINARY LEGISLATION (1944-1954) Boglarka Lilla Schlachta Fulfilling my pledge related to UNKP, I observe the changes in the judicial profession between 1944 and 1954 in this study. Within the scope of this topic there are still questions waiting for answers that are related to the regulation of the disciplinary cases of the judges. Following the methodical requirements of the dogmatical analysis applied in Legal science, I collected the norms of the current legislation during my research and compared the most significant ones to the disciplinary cases retrieved from the Capital Archives of Budapest. I observed the subject-matter of the norms and their enforcement by applying case law and inductive analysis. In addition, the study also contains resources deriving from the Historical Archives of the State Security Services. Through these documents we can obtain an insight into the history of judicial profession after 1945 from a new perspective that reveals the bizarre expectations of the state based on the ideology in respect of the judicial profession. In the Capital Archives of Budapest, I collected the disciplinary cases of the judges, while in the Historical Archives of the State Security Services I observed the personal files of judges accused of embezzlement, war crimes and crimes against people. As for the results of my research, we can conclude that until 1945 the regulations related to the judicial profession, more specifically to the liability of judges, were meant to prevail the dignity of the jurisdiction. At the same time, the disciplinary proceedings provided a guarantee for the meticulous scrutiny of the cases and the defence of the rights of the judge submitted to these proceedings. After 1945 and even after 1948, the change of regime used the professional pragmatics of jurisdiction to select its personnel and considered the disciplinary proceedings as the tool of the new socialist courts. POSTMODERN TRENDS IN NORTH AMERICAN PROTESTANT HOMILETICS Abel Tikasz This study examines North American postmodern homiletical trends after New Homiletics and Postliberal Homiletics. For these tendencies philosophy is the primary source of homiletics. The conversational homiletic (Lucy Rose, John McClure) uses the deconstruction theory of Jacques Derrida to promote the s" 174 "