Chinese Legal Reform and the Global Legal Order
This volume critically evaluates the latest legal reform of China, covering major areas such as trade and securities law, online privacy law, criminal law, human rights and international law. It represents a bold departure from the most recent works on Chinese legal reform by engaging the ideas of experts in contemporary Chinese law with the archival scholarship of Chinese legal historians. This unique interdisciplinary feature affords readers a more nuanced view of the complexities and specificities of how China has problematised legal reforms in various historical contexts when building a progressive yet sustainable legal system. This volume appraises the most current reform in Chinese law by considering China's engagement with globalisation, increasingly complicated domestic situation and historical legal transplantation experiences. It will be of huge interest to students, researchers and practitioners interested in Chinese law and policy, China and Asian studies and Chinese legal history.
- Provides a critical evaluation of the latest reform in Chinese law and China's global interactions in law, politics and international relations
- Explores ideas of contemporary Chinese law with historical perspectives that provides a unique insight into the developments of its legal system
- Presents different perspectives to help readers gain a better understanding of the ongoing Chinese legal reform and a fuller picture of the developing Chinese legal system
Product details
November 2017Hardback
9781107182004
326 pages
235 × 157 × 21 mm
0.59kg
3 b/w illus. 5 tables
Available
Table of Contents
- 1. The law, China and the world: an introduction Yun Zhao and Michael Ng
- Part I. Chinese Legal Reform in Xi Jinping's Era:
- 2. Punishments in the post re-education through labour world: questions about minor crime in China Sarah Biddulph
- 3. Understanding the presumption of innocence in China: institution and practice Lin Xifen and Casey Watters
- 4. Judicial approach to human rights in transitional China Shucheng Wang
- 5. Public enforcement of securities laws: a case of convergence? Chao Xi and Xuanming Pan
- 6. China's free trade from SEZs to CEPA to FTZs: the Beijing Consensus in global convergence and divergence Wenwei Guan
- 7. Achievements and challenges of Chinese maritime judicial practice Liang Zhao
- 8. Interaction of national law-making and international treaties: implementation of the convention against torture in China Bjorn Ahl
- 9. Online privacy protection: a Legal regime for personal data protection in China Yun Zhao
- Part II. The Back Matters: Historical Legal Reform in China:
- 10. Traditionalising Chinese law: symbolic epistemic violence in the discourse of legal reform and modernity in late Qing China Li Chen
- 11. Judicial orientalism: imaginaries of Chinese legal transplantation in common law Michael Ng
- 12. Commercial arbitration transplanted: a tale of the book industry in modern Shanghai Billy K. L. So and Sufumi So
- 13. China's unilateral abrogation of the Sino-Belgian Treaty: case study of an instance of deviant transplantation Maria Adelel Carrai
- 14. Consequential court and judicial leadership: the unwritten Republican judicial tradition in China Zhaoxin Jiang.