A contextualized and critical reading of the origin and evolution of China's rural land takings law.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Chun Peng is presently an assistant professor at Peking University Law School. He received his doctorate and master's degree in law from the University of Oxford and holds a double degree in law and economics from Peking University. He has published widely on Chinese constitutional law, administrative law and comparative law in English and Chinese. Besides scholarly work, he writes op-eds on China and the world at The Diplomat, China Daily and Caixin. He also provides consultancy to the Ministry of Land and Natural Resources and local governments on legal reforms in China.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction 2. A broken constitutional promise: diagnoses and prescriptions 3. Limited reform: symptoms and causes 4. Original constitutional takings clause: origin, meaning and purpose 5. Theoretical foundations of land takings power: competing traditions and common legacy 6. 1982 constitutional taking clause re-examined: new wine in an old bottle 7. Rural land expropriation law in the reform era: a story of continuity 8. Conclusion.
1. Introduction 2. A broken constitutional promise: diagnoses and prescriptions 3. Limited reform: symptoms and causes 4. Original constitutional takings clause: origin, meaning and purpose 5. Theoretical foundations of land takings power: competing traditions and common legacy 6. 1982 constitutional taking clause re-examined: new wine in an old bottle 7. Rural land expropriation law in the reform era: a story of continuity 8. Conclusion.
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