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This book is a grand review of the centurial development of rule of law in China. It covers the most important issues in this area and presents “political constitution,” a new interpretative framework that allows the Chinese experience of rule of law to be more fully and correctly expressed. It is especially useful to scholars involved in the study of modern China. The main chapters of this book include: The Constituent Movement in the Late Qing Dynasty; The Xinhai (1911) Revolution; Constitution-making at the Beginning of the Republic of China; The Great Revolution in the 1920s; The Rise of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book is a grand review of the centurial development of rule of law in China. It covers the most important issues in this area and presents “political constitution,” a new interpretative framework that allows the Chinese experience of rule of law to be more fully and correctly expressed. It is especially useful to scholars involved in the study of modern China. The main chapters of this book include: The Constituent Movement in the Late Qing Dynasty; The Xinhai (1911) Revolution; Constitution-making at the Beginning of the Republic of China; The Great Revolution in the 1920s; The Rise of the Party State and its Transition; The Founding of 1949 New China and its Early Constitutional Development; and The Dualist System of Rule of Law in the Reforming Times.
Autorenporträt
Quanxi Gao, Professor of Law; Dean, the Institute for Advanced Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences, BeiHang University. B.A., Nanjing Normal University, 1983; Master of Philosophy, Jilin University,1985; Ph.D., Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, 1988. From Lecturer, Associate Professor to Professor of Law, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, 1989-2007. Professor of Law, BeiHang University Law School since 2007; Dean of the Institute for Advanced Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences since2010. Books include On Self Consciousness(1990); Legal Order and Liberal Justice(2004); Political Philosophy of David Hume(2004); On Recht by Mutual Recognition(2005); Five Treatises on Modern Politics(2008); From Constitutional Politics to Normal Politics(2009); Constitutional Moment(2011), etc. Wei Zhang, Prosecutor of Beijing Chaoyang District People s Prosecutors Office. LL.B, Zhengzhou University Law School, 2006; LL.M, Zhengzhou University Law School, 2009; Ph.D in Management, BeiHang University, 2012 Feilong Tian, Assistant Professor of the Institute for Advance Studies in Humanities and Social Sciences, BeiHang University. LL.B, Nanjing University Law School, 2006; LL.M, Peking University Law School, 2008; J.S.D., Peking University Law School, 2012. Leslie Wright Fellow, Faculty of Law, The University of Hong Kong, 2014-2015.