Karen Turner is professor and department chair of history at Holy Cross College. James V. Feinerman is James M. Morita Professor of Asian Legal Studies at Georgetown University. R. Kent Guy is professor emeritus of history at the University of Washington. Other contributors are William P. Alford, Alison W. Conner, Jack L. Dull, Tahirih V. Lee, Jonathan K. Ocko, Pitman B. Potter, Claudia Ross, Lester Ross, Yuanyuan Shen, Joanna Waley-Cohen, and Margaret Y. K. Woo.
Karen Turner is professor and department chair of history at Holy Cross College. James V. Feinerman is James M. Morita Professor of Asian Legal Studies at Georgetown University. R. Kent Guy is professor emeritus of history at the University of Washington. Other contributors are William P. Alford, Alison W. Conner, Jack L. Dull, Tahirih V. Lee, Jonathan K. Ocko, Pitman B. Potter, Claudia Ross, Lester Ross, Yuanyuan Shen, Joanna Waley-Cohen, and Margaret Y. K. Woo.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Karen Turner is professor and department chair of history at Holy Cross College. James V. Feinerman is James M. Morita Professor of Asian Legal Studies at Georgetown University. R. Kent Guy is professor emeritus of history at the University of Washington. Other contributors are William P. Alford, Alison W. Conner, Jack L. Dull, Tahirih V. Lee, Jonathan K. Ocko, Pitman B. Potter, Claudia Ross, Lester Ross, Yuanyuan Shen, Joanna Waley-Cohen, and Margaret Y. K. Woo.
Inhaltsangabe
Foreword Acknowledgments Introduction: The Problem of Paradigms 1. Conceptions and Receptions of Legality: Understanding the Complexity of Law Reform in Modern China 2. Law, Law, What Law? Why Western Scholars of China Have Not Had More to Say about Its Law 3. Using the Past to Make a Case for the Rule of Law 4. Rule of Man and the Rule of Law in China: Punishing Provincial Governors during the Qing 5. Collective Responsibility in Qing Criminal Law 6. True Confessions? Chinese Confessions Then and Now 7. Law and Discretion in Contemporary Chinese Courts 8. Equality and Justice in Official and Popular Views about Civil Obligations: China and Taiwan 9. Language and Law: Sources of Systemic Vagueness and Ambiguous Authority in Chinese Statutory Language 10. The Future of Federalism in China 11. The Rule of Law Imposed from Outside: China's Foreign-Oriented Legal Regime since 1978 Epilogue: The Deep Roots of Resistance to Law Codes and Lawyers in China Contributors Index
Foreword Acknowledgments Introduction: The Problem of Paradigms 1. Conceptions and Receptions of Legality: Understanding the Complexity of Law Reform in Modern China 2. Law, Law, What Law? Why Western Scholars of China Have Not Had More to Say about Its Law 3. Using the Past to Make a Case for the Rule of Law 4. Rule of Man and the Rule of Law in China: Punishing Provincial Governors during the Qing 5. Collective Responsibility in Qing Criminal Law 6. True Confessions? Chinese Confessions Then and Now 7. Law and Discretion in Contemporary Chinese Courts 8. Equality and Justice in Official and Popular Views about Civil Obligations: China and Taiwan 9. Language and Law: Sources of Systemic Vagueness and Ambiguous Authority in Chinese Statutory Language 10. The Future of Federalism in China 11. The Rule of Law Imposed from Outside: China's Foreign-Oriented Legal Regime since 1978 Epilogue: The Deep Roots of Resistance to Law Codes and Lawyers in China Contributors Index
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