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"One Country, Two Systems, Three Legal Orders" - Perspectives of
Evolution - : Essays on Macau's Autonomy after the Resumption of
Sovereignty by China" can be said, in a short preamble-like manner,
to be a book that provides a comprehensive look at several issues
regarding public law that arise from, or correlate with, the
Chinese apex motto for reunification - One Country, Two Systems -
and its implementation in Macau and Hong Kong. Noble and
contemporary themes such as autonomy models and fundamental rights
are thoroughly approached, with a multilayered analysis
encompassing both Western and Chinese views, and an extensive
comparative law acquis is also brought forward. Furthermore,
relevant issues on international law, criminal law, and historical
and comparative evolutions and interactions of different legal s-
tems are laid down in this panoramic, yet comprehensive book. One
cannot but underline the presence, in the many approaches and
comments, of a certain aura of a modern Kantian cosmopolitanism
revisitation throughout the work, especially when dealing with the
cardinal principle of "One Country, Two Systems", which enabled a
peaceful and integral reunification ex vi international law - the
Joint Declarations - that ended an external and distant control.
"One Country, Two Systems, Three Legal Orders" - Perspectives of
Evolution - : Essays on Macau's Autonomy after the Resumption of
Sovereignty by China" can be said, in a short preamble-like manner,
to be a book that provides a comprehensive look at several issues
regarding public law that arise from, or correlate with, the
Chinese apex motto for reunification - One Country, Two Systems -
and its implementation in Macau and Hong Kong. Noble and
contemporary themes such as autonomy models and fundamental rights
are thoroughly approached, with a multilayered analysis
encompassing both Western and Chinese views, and an extensive
comparative law acquis is also brought forward. Furthermore,
relevant issues on international law, criminal law, and historical
and comparative evolutions and interactions of different legal s-
tems are laid down in this panoramic, yet comprehensive book. One
cannot but underline the presence, in the many approaches and
comments, of a certain aura of a modern Kantian cosmopolitanism
revisitation throughout the work, especially when dealing with the
cardinal principle of "One Country, Two Systems", which enabled a
peaceful and integral reunification ex vi international law - the
Joint Declarations - that ended an external and distant control.
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