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This book explores the tension in East Asia between the trend towards a convergence of legal practices in the direction of a universal model and a reassertion of local cultural practices, including those which define different group identities, which give substance to different ideas about what constitutes "justice." The trend towards convergence arises in part from "globalization," from "rule of law programs" promulgated by institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and the Asian Development Bank, who are keen to ensure a reasonable level of global conformity in the legal…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
This book explores the tension in East Asia between the trend towards a convergence of legal practices in the direction of a universal model and a reassertion of local cultural practices, including those which define different group identities, which give substance to different ideas about what constitutes "justice." The trend towards convergence arises in part from "globalization," from "rule of law programs" promulgated by institutions such as the International Monetary Fund and the Asian Development Bank, who are keen to ensure a reasonable level of global conformity in the legal underpinnings of commercial activity, and from widespread migration in the region, while the opposing trend arises in part from moves to resist such "globalization." This book explores a wide range of issues related to this key problem, covering especially well China, where resolving differences in conceptions about the rule of law is a key issue as China begins to integrate itself into the World Trade Organization regime.

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Autorenporträt
Lucie Cheng is professor of Sociology and Urban Planning at the University of California, Los Angeles. She is the Founding Dean of the School of Social Transformation Studies, Shih Hsin University, Taipei; and Permanent Visiting Professor of International Relations, Nankai University, Tainjin. Arthur Rosett has been Professor of Law at the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law (UCLA) since 1967. For more than twenty years he has taught a variety of Asian Law courses as well as contract law and international business transactions. Margaret Y.K. Woo is a Professor of Law at Northeastern University School of Law. In 1997, she was named the law school's distinguished Professor of Public Policy. She was formerly a Fellow a the Bunting Institute of Radcliffe College and presently, an Associate in Research at East Asian Legal Studies Centre of Harvard Law School and the Fairbank Centre of Harvard College.