1st Edition

The Changing Chinese Legal System, 1978-Present Centralization of Power and Rationalization of the Legal System

By Bin Liang Copyright 2008
    268 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    268 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This groundbreaking book examines the changing Chinese legal system since 1978. In addition to historical analyses of changes at the economic, political-legal, and social levels, Liang gives special attention to crime and punishment functions of the legal system, and the current judicial system based on field research, i.e., court observations in both Beijing and Chengdu. The court system has been in a process of systemization, both internally and externally, seeking more power and relative independence. However, traditional influences, such as preference of mediation (over litigation) and substantive justice (over procedural justice), and lack of respect (from the masses) and guaranteed power (from the political structure), still have major impacts on the building and operation of the judicial system. Liang also shrewdly places the Chinese legal and political reform within the global system. This book, which reshapes our understanding of the economic, political, and essentially legal changes in China within the global context, will be crucial reading for scholars of Asia, law, criminal justice, and sociology.

     

    CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION

    CHAPTER 2. ECONOMIC REFORM AND REINTERPRETATED MARXISM

    CHAPTER 3. LEGALIZATION AND CENTRALIZATION OF POWER

    CHAPTER 4. CRIME AND PUNISHMENT IN TRANSITION

    CHAPTER 5. CHINA’S GLOBALIZATION

    CHAPTER 6. CHINA’S CURRENT COURT SYSTEM: PROCEDURES, ROLE PLAYERS, AND MAIN ISSUES

    CHAPTER 7. CONCLUSION

    APPENDIX

    A RESEARCH PICTURES

    B RESEARCH MAPS

    C DATELINES OF CHINA’S NEGOTIATION WITH THE WTO

    D CASE SUMMARY TABLES

    GLOSSARY

    Biography

    Bin Liang

    '...the book is a valuable piece of scholarship in the "law and society" tradition that seeks to place China's legal reform in the last thirty years within the context of its economic, social and political change. It deserves to be read by students and academics who study the contemporary Chinese legal system and are concerned about the prospects for the rule of law in China.' - Albert H. Y. Chen, The China Quarterly, 196,  December 2008