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This book investigates the policy implications, discursive ethos and practical realities of plea-based case dispositions in the criminal justice system of four Chinese-speaking jurisdictions, including Mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau. It aims to provide fresh and cutting-edge insights into important legal, social and cultural issues found throughout plea-based case dispositions in Greater China, but in a geographically specific manner - providing an in-depth view of issues that can help forge connections and inspire creative solutions for scholars gaining understanding of common…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book investigates the policy implications, discursive ethos and practical realities of plea-based case dispositions in the criminal justice system of four Chinese-speaking jurisdictions, including Mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau. It aims to provide fresh and cutting-edge insights into important legal, social and cultural issues found throughout plea-based case dispositions in Greater China, but in a geographically specific manner - providing an in-depth view of issues that can help forge connections and inspire creative solutions for scholars gaining understanding of common problems across the societies in question. The book includes an introduction and conclusion with 9 chapters. Based on a diverse range of first-hand data and secondary sources of information, topics covered in the chapters represent multiangle perspectives and analysis that help to construct a sophisticated, intricate and evidence-based portrait of locally informed approaches to case disposition through pleas in Chinese-speaking societies.

Autorenporträt
Enshen Li is an associate professor at the School of Law, City University of Hong Kong. His research lies at the intersection of several research fields: terrorism, criminal justice, theoretical criminology and socio-legal studies of punishment. He is the author of Punishment in Contemporary China: Its Evolution, Development and Change. Xiaoyu Yuan is an associate professor at the School of Criminal Justice, Shanghai University of Political Science and Law. She is the author of the book Restorative Justice in China: Comparing Theory and Practice. She has focused on issues in criminal justice and comparative criminology. Yan Zhang is a research assistant professor at the Department of Sociology, University of Macau. He obtained his PhD at the Australian National University. His research focus is restorative justice, qualitative research, and regulation and governance. Yan currently serves as the managing editorof the Asian Journal of Criminology.