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Bird in a Cage - Legal Reform in China after Mao (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R4,375
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Bird in a Cage - Legal Reform in China after Mao (Hardcover)
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Since 1979, China has been building new legal institutions made
necessary by economic reforms that have reduced the role of state
planning, and by the decline of Maoist totalitarianism. This book
analyzes the principal legal institutions that have emerged and
assesses the prospects for increasing the rule of law in China.
The book first establishes the cultural and institutional context
in which legal reforms take place. It traces the main features of
pre-Communist Chinese legal tradition, the drastic impact on law of
thirty years of Maoist rule, and the extensive changes throughout
Chinese society since Mao's death, notably the rise of the local
party-state at the expense of central government power. The book's
analysis begins with the Chinese leadership's policy toward law,
identifying basic ambivalence toward law that makes the Chinese
commitment to legality incomplete. It then surveys major
developments, emphasizing the creation of new rights, revision of
criminal law and procedure, and construction of a nascent
administrative law.
The book then examines in detail dispute resolution by
extrajudicial mediation and the courts. Although mediation is no
longer infused with Maoism, it is still used as an instrument to
maintain public order. The study of the courts examines court
organization, the selection and training of judges, the rise of
litigation, the critical influence of localism, and ongoing
conflicts between professionalism and a continuing tendency to view
the judge as a soldier of the state. The author suggests that the
limited role that Chinese courts are today permitted to play
combines with the organization of the judicial process and the
mentality of the judiciary to make Chinese adjudication more akin
to bureaucratic decision making than judging in the West.
How should the accomplishments of legal reform and the continuing
obstacles to further reform affect U.S. policy toward China? The
book concludes by appraising implications for U.S. policy on such
issues as human rights, Chinese involvement with the World Trade
Organization, and bilateral relations generally. The author argues
that U.S. policy makers must neither moralize about the rule of law
nor dismiss it as a concept alien to China. They must also curb
both optimism and expectations that legal reform will lead to
political reform. Chinese law can only grow slowly, no matter how
urgently the West may desire quick progress.
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