The Making of the Chinese Civil Code
Herausgeber: Jiang, Hao; Sirena, Pietro
The Making of the Chinese Civil Code
Herausgeber: Jiang, Hao; Sirena, Pietro
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"A group of leading comparative private law scholars from Europe, United States, and China came together and studied the new Chinese Civil Code from a comparative and cross-disciplinary perspective"--
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"A group of leading comparative private law scholars from Europe, United States, and China came together and studied the new Chinese Civil Code from a comparative and cross-disciplinary perspective"--
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 350
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. September 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 635g
- ISBN-13: 9781009336642
- ISBN-10: 1009336649
- Artikelnr.: 67826456
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 350
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. September 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 635g
- ISBN-13: 9781009336642
- ISBN-10: 1009336649
- Artikelnr.: 67826456
1. The making of a civil code in China: promises and perils of a new civil
law Hao Jiang; 2. Personality rights in China's new civil code: a response
to increasing awareness of rights in an era of evolving technology Liming
Wang and Bingwan Xiong; 3. Force majeure or change of circumstances: an
enduring dichotomy in Chinese law? Qiao Liu; 4. Art. 580 (2) of the Chinese
civil code: can the Chinese folk medicine cure serious illness? Shiyuan
Han; 5. Contractual consent in the new Chinese civil code Catherine Valcke;
6. The security interests in Chinese law: some nuances Lei Chen; 7. Chinese
tort law in the era of the civil code Chunyan Ding; 8. Causation in the
Chinese civil code: a comparative law appraisal Marta Infantino and Weiwei
Wang; 9. The aims of tort law across China and the west Mauro Bussani; 10.
Classifying the passive appreciation of separate property during marriage
in the Chinese civil code: a legal and economic analysis Jian He; 11. The
rule of law in traditional China James Gordley; 12. The private law
influence of the great Qing code Taisu Zhang; 13. The new validity rules in
Chinese civil code and Chinese state-owned enterprises' freedom in
contracting: one step too far Hao Jiang and Antonia von Appen; 14. Chinese
civil law and soviet influences: what is left? Gianmaria Ajani; 15. The
connections between roman law and Chinese civil law: traditions,
innovations and environmental protection Enrico Toti; Index.
law Hao Jiang; 2. Personality rights in China's new civil code: a response
to increasing awareness of rights in an era of evolving technology Liming
Wang and Bingwan Xiong; 3. Force majeure or change of circumstances: an
enduring dichotomy in Chinese law? Qiao Liu; 4. Art. 580 (2) of the Chinese
civil code: can the Chinese folk medicine cure serious illness? Shiyuan
Han; 5. Contractual consent in the new Chinese civil code Catherine Valcke;
6. The security interests in Chinese law: some nuances Lei Chen; 7. Chinese
tort law in the era of the civil code Chunyan Ding; 8. Causation in the
Chinese civil code: a comparative law appraisal Marta Infantino and Weiwei
Wang; 9. The aims of tort law across China and the west Mauro Bussani; 10.
Classifying the passive appreciation of separate property during marriage
in the Chinese civil code: a legal and economic analysis Jian He; 11. The
rule of law in traditional China James Gordley; 12. The private law
influence of the great Qing code Taisu Zhang; 13. The new validity rules in
Chinese civil code and Chinese state-owned enterprises' freedom in
contracting: one step too far Hao Jiang and Antonia von Appen; 14. Chinese
civil law and soviet influences: what is left? Gianmaria Ajani; 15. The
connections between roman law and Chinese civil law: traditions,
innovations and environmental protection Enrico Toti; Index.
1. The making of a civil code in China: promises and perils of a new civil
law Hao Jiang; 2. Personality rights in China's new civil code: a response
to increasing awareness of rights in an era of evolving technology Liming
Wang and Bingwan Xiong; 3. Force majeure or change of circumstances: an
enduring dichotomy in Chinese law? Qiao Liu; 4. Art. 580 (2) of the Chinese
civil code: can the Chinese folk medicine cure serious illness? Shiyuan
Han; 5. Contractual consent in the new Chinese civil code Catherine Valcke;
6. The security interests in Chinese law: some nuances Lei Chen; 7. Chinese
tort law in the era of the civil code Chunyan Ding; 8. Causation in the
Chinese civil code: a comparative law appraisal Marta Infantino and Weiwei
Wang; 9. The aims of tort law across China and the west Mauro Bussani; 10.
Classifying the passive appreciation of separate property during marriage
in the Chinese civil code: a legal and economic analysis Jian He; 11. The
rule of law in traditional China James Gordley; 12. The private law
influence of the great Qing code Taisu Zhang; 13. The new validity rules in
Chinese civil code and Chinese state-owned enterprises' freedom in
contracting: one step too far Hao Jiang and Antonia von Appen; 14. Chinese
civil law and soviet influences: what is left? Gianmaria Ajani; 15. The
connections between roman law and Chinese civil law: traditions,
innovations and environmental protection Enrico Toti; Index.
law Hao Jiang; 2. Personality rights in China's new civil code: a response
to increasing awareness of rights in an era of evolving technology Liming
Wang and Bingwan Xiong; 3. Force majeure or change of circumstances: an
enduring dichotomy in Chinese law? Qiao Liu; 4. Art. 580 (2) of the Chinese
civil code: can the Chinese folk medicine cure serious illness? Shiyuan
Han; 5. Contractual consent in the new Chinese civil code Catherine Valcke;
6. The security interests in Chinese law: some nuances Lei Chen; 7. Chinese
tort law in the era of the civil code Chunyan Ding; 8. Causation in the
Chinese civil code: a comparative law appraisal Marta Infantino and Weiwei
Wang; 9. The aims of tort law across China and the west Mauro Bussani; 10.
Classifying the passive appreciation of separate property during marriage
in the Chinese civil code: a legal and economic analysis Jian He; 11. The
rule of law in traditional China James Gordley; 12. The private law
influence of the great Qing code Taisu Zhang; 13. The new validity rules in
Chinese civil code and Chinese state-owned enterprises' freedom in
contracting: one step too far Hao Jiang and Antonia von Appen; 14. Chinese
civil law and soviet influences: what is left? Gianmaria Ajani; 15. The
connections between roman law and Chinese civil law: traditions,
innovations and environmental protection Enrico Toti; Index.