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Articles 1 - 15 of 15
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Study Of Chinese Law In The United States: Reflections On The Past And Concerns About The Future, Stanley Lubman
The Study Of Chinese Law In The United States: Reflections On The Past And Concerns About The Future, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
No abstract provided.
Dispute Resolution In China After Deng Xiaoping: Mao And Mediation Revisited, Stanley Lubman
Dispute Resolution In China After Deng Xiaoping: Mao And Mediation Revisited, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
Analyzes the structure and functioning of dispute resolution through extrajudicial mediation and the courts, before and after legal reform, in order to identify dominant currents and likely developments in Chinese law.
Western Scholarship On Chinese Law: Past Accomplishments And Present Challenges, Stanley Lubman
Western Scholarship On Chinese Law: Past Accomplishments And Present Challenges, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
No abstract provided.
Studying Contemporary Chinese Law: Limits, Possibilities And Strategy, Stanley Lubman
Studying Contemporary Chinese Law: Limits, Possibilities And Strategy, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
No abstract provided.
Form And Function In The Chinese Criminal Process, Stanley Lubman
Form And Function In The Chinese Criminal Process, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
Thesis (LL.D.)--Columbia university.
Trade Between The United States And The People's Republic Of China: Practice, Policy, And Law, Stanley Lubman
Trade Between The United States And The People's Republic Of China: Practice, Policy, And Law, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
No abstract provided.
Investment And Export Contracts In The People's Republic Of China: Perspectives On Evolving Patterns, Stanley Lubman
Investment And Export Contracts In The People's Republic Of China: Perspectives On Evolving Patterns, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
No abstract provided.
Looking For Law In China, Stanley Lubman
Emerging Functions Of Formal Legal Institutions In China's Modernization, Stanley Lubman
Emerging Functions Of Formal Legal Institutions In China's Modernization, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
No abstract provided.
New Developments In Law In The People's Republic Of China, Stanley Lubman
New Developments In Law In The People's Republic Of China, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
No abstract provided.
Introduction: The Future Of Chinese Law, Stanley Lubman
Introduction: The Future Of Chinese Law, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
No abstract provided.
On Understanding Chinese Law And Legal Institutions, Stanley Lubman
On Understanding Chinese Law And Legal Institutions, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
No abstract provided.
The Unrecognized Government In American Courts: Upright V. Mercury Business Machines, Stanley Lubman
The Unrecognized Government In American Courts: Upright V. Mercury Business Machines, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
No abstract provided.
The Study Of Chinese Law In The United States: Reflections On The Past And Concerns About The Future, Stanley Lubman
The Study Of Chinese Law In The United States: Reflections On The Past And Concerns About The Future, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
I first survey the development and current state of the field by reviewing American scholarship on some major areas of Chinese law from those early days up to the present. Then, against this background, I comment on the current scene and address the challenges that Chinese law continues to present to Western attempts at understanding China.
Bird In A Cage: Chinese Law Reform After Twenty Years, Stanley Lubman
Bird In A Cage: Chinese Law Reform After Twenty Years, Stanley Lubman
Stanley Lubman
When I wrote in 1979, it was easy to summarize the state of Chinese legal institutions because they were so sparse. Although a judicial system had been created on the Soviet model in the 1950s, it had been politicized by the end of that decade after a brief period of liberalization, and then further wrecked by the Cultural Revolution. A new period of institution-building began in 1979; reconstruction of the courts began and the law schools, closed for a decade, reopened. Most fundamentally, the policies of the Chinese leadership seemed to promise, as I noted then, "attempts to conceptualize and …