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This book presents a hotly debated issue concerning the ownership of trust property in China. The book describes various conventional interpretations of Chinese Trust Law submitted by legal scholars and compares diverse approaches regarding the ownership of trust property provided by jurisdictions globally. The book does not directly answer the question "Who is the owner of trust property in China?" Instead, using a social capital perspective, it develops a more practical perspective to explain why Chinese trust business has grown rapidly even in lack of legal certainty regarding the location…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book presents a hotly debated issue concerning the ownership of trust property in China. The book describes various conventional interpretations of Chinese Trust Law submitted by legal scholars and compares diverse approaches regarding the ownership of trust property provided by jurisdictions globally. The book does not directly answer the question "Who is the owner of trust property in China?" Instead, using a social capital perspective, it develops a more practical perspective to explain why Chinese trust business has grown rapidly even in lack of legal certainty regarding the location of ownership of trust property. The book also further predicts under what conditions is the time ripe to clarify the location of the ownership of trust property in China.

By employing those sociological concepts often used to depict and analyze society, this book outlines the structure of the Chinese trust business and related social relations in different stages, i.e., the current rapid
development stage, and the possible transitional stage in the near future. The focus is on how the social network structure affects the behavior of actors (such as the settlor, the trustee, and the beneficiaries, and/or their potential candidates) within the relevant section of Chinese society.

The book provides readers with an intensive analysis of the impacts of historical, cultural, and social elements on the legislation and development of trust law in China. It will appeal both to lawyers interested in the Chinese trust business and to comparative law researchers and social scientists.
Autorenporträt
Zhen Meng is both a lecturer at the Department of Law, School of Intellectual Property, Nanjing University of Science and Technology, China, and a researcher at the Intellectual Property Development & Research Center of Jiangsu, China. She holds an LLD from the Graduate School of Law in Kyushu University, Japan, and an LLM and LLB from China University of Political Science and Law. Her research has focused on civil law, commercial law, and Intellectual property law, particularly trust law. Current publications: Should China clarify the ownership of trust assets? A social network perspective. Trusts & Trustees 21(5) 2015,¿pp. 492-500; Legal certainty and trusts in China (in Fenwick and Wrbka eds. Legal certainty in a contemporary context, 2016) .