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This timely book offers revealing insights into the changing role
of China in world governance as exemplified by the Silk Road
Initiative, the People's Republic's first published major
initiative for external affairs. Focusing on various aspects of the
Silk Road Initiative, particularly those that are largely neglected
in current discussions, including culture and philosophy, finance
and investment, environmental protection and social responsibility,
judiciary and lawyers, the authors explore a wide range of contexts
in which China's role as an emerging power in international
relations and international law is examined. In the current era of
ever-increasing populism, protectionism and challenges to
globalization, the authors explore the Chinese philosophy
underpinning Chinese norms of regional and international
development. Bearing in mind the political and economic
uncertainties hampering the establishment of such norms, the
authors offer crucial insights into how the Silk Road Initiative
could or should be developed and regulated.Given its depth of
coverage, the book is an indispensable read for anyone interested
in the Initiative and its social-legal implications.
This timely book offers revealing insights into the changing role
of China in world governance as exemplified by the Silk Road
Initiative, the People's Republic's first published major
initiative for external affairs. Focusing on various aspects of the
Silk Road Initiative, particularly those that are largely neglected
in current discussions, including culture and philosophy, finance
and investment, environmental protection and social responsibility,
judiciary and lawyers, the authors explore a wide range of contexts
in which China's role as an emerging power in international
relations and international law is examined. In the current era of
ever-increasing populism, protectionism and challenges to
globalization, the authors explore the Chinese philosophy
underpinning Chinese norms of regional and international
development. Bearing in mind the political and economic
uncertainties hampering the establishment of such norms, the
authors offer crucial insights into how the Silk Road Initiative
could or should be developed and regulated.Given its depth of
coverage, the book is an indispensable read for anyone interested
in the Initiative and its social-legal implications.
This book discusses whether criminal law theory, or law theory more
generally, can be regarded as a branch of science. The issues
addressed in this book are following: Is the criminal law
scholarship which obviously informs the legal system itself a form
of science, and in what sense? Can there be systemic developments
in criminal law theory? This question is coming more pressing as
interdisciplinary approaches have increased influence in the field.
More than that, the question will also have implications for our
understanding of legal theory more generally. An innovative,
important addition to how criminal law and theory should be viewed.
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