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Western Scholarship On Chinese Law: Past Accomplishments And Present Challenges, Stanley Lubman Dec 2015

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 Dec 2015

Studying Contemporary Chinese Law: Limits, Possibilities And Strategy, Stanley Lubman

Stanley Lubman

No abstract provided.


Can The West Learn From The Rest?' The Chinese Legal Order's Hybrid Modernity, Nicholas Howson Dec 2015

Can The West Learn From The Rest?' The Chinese Legal Order's Hybrid Modernity, Nicholas Howson

Nicholas Howson

I am asked to present on the "shortcomings of the Western model of legality based on a professionalized, individualistic and highly formalistic approach to justice" as a way to understanding if "the West can develop today a form of legality which is relational rather than based on litigation as a zero sum game, learning from face to face social organizations in which individuals understand the law" - presumably in the context of the imperial and modem Chinese legal systems which I know best as a scholar and have lived for many years as a resident of the modem identity of …


The Study Of Chinese Law In The United States: Reflections On The Past And Concerns About The Future, Stanley Lubman Dec 2015

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.


China's Judicial System And Judicial Reform, Nicholas Howson Dec 2015

China's Judicial System And Judicial Reform, Nicholas Howson

Nicholas Howson

The following is an extract from the statement delivered by Michigan Law School Professor Nicholas Howson at the inaugural “China-U.S. Rule of Law Dialogue” held at Beijing’s Tsinghua University July 29-30, 2010, and convened by Tsinghua Law Dean Wang Zhenmin and Harvard Law School Professor and East Asian Legal Studies Director William Alford, and with the support of the China-United States Exchange Foundation chaired by C.H. Tung, first chief executive and president of the Executive Council of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region. The dialogue was organized as a private meeting between senior PRC law professors and U.S.-based Chinese law …


Bird In A Cage: Chinese Law Reform After Twenty Years, Stanley Lubman Dec 2015

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 …