The role of contract in early modern Chinese economic life, when acknowledged at all, is usually presented as a minor one. This volume demonstrates that contract actually played a critical role in the everyday structure of many kinds of relationships and transactions; contracts are, moreover, of enormous value to present-day scholars as transcriptions of the fine details of day-to-day economic activity. Offering a new perspective on economic and legal institutions, particularly the closely related institutions of contract and property, in Qing and Republican China, the papers in this volume spell out how these institutions worked in specific social contexts. Drawing on recent research in far-flung archives, the contributors take as givens both the embeddedness of contract in Chinese social and economic discourse and its role in the spread of commodification. Two papers deal with broad issues: Zelin's, which argues for a distinctively Chinese heritage of strong property rights, and Ocko's, which examines the usefulness of American legal scholarship as a comparative analytic framework.
"...the eleven papers in this volume present a fascinating range of case studies and historical details on the role of contracts and property rights in Chinese conomic transactions..."-- EH.NET "This book is essential reading for scholars and graduate students interested in Chinese legal, social, and economic history."--History: Reviews of New Books
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
"...the eleven papers in this volume present a fascinating range of case studies and historical details on the role of contracts and property rights in Chinese conomic transactions..."-- EH.NET "This book is essential reading for scholars and graduate students interested in Chinese legal, social, and economic history."--History: Reviews of New Books
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.