Chinese Legality focuses on the concept of "legality" as a lens through which to look at Chinese legal reforms, making a valuable contribution to the argument that law has historically been used as a tool to control society in China.
This book discusses how Chinese legality in the Xi Jinping era is defined from a theoretical, ideological, historical, and cultural point of view. Covering vitally important events such as Xi’s term limit issue, the Hong Kong protests and the Covid-19 pandemic, the book examines how legality is reflected and embodied in laws and constitutions, and how legality is realized through institutions, with particular focus on how the CCP interacts with the legislature, the judiciary, the procuratorate, and the police.
As a study of the legal reforms under Xi Jinping, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of Chinese politics and law.
Author(s): Shiping Hua
Series: Routledge Studies on Comparative Asian Politics
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 275
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
List of Contributors
1 Introduction to Chinese Legality: Ideology, Law, and Institutions
Part 1 How Is Legality Defined? Theories and Ideologies
2 Rule of Law With Chinese Characteristics
3 A Hundred Schools of Thought Contending on Constitutionalism—The Short Life of the Great Debate of Constitutionalism Remembered
4 Legalism and Xi Jinping Thought: Han Fei’s Influence on Contemporary Chinese Politics and Law
Part 2 How Is Legality Reflected and Embodied in Laws?
5 Dashed Hopes? The Limits of International Economic Norms in Promoting the Rule of Law in China
6 Legality of Chinese Extraterritorial Jurisdiction
7 Civil Rights Chinese Style: The Politics and Ideology of the New Civil Code
Part 3 How Is Legality Realized? Institutions in Action
8 Can Xi Jinping Stop the Bureaucrats From Seeking Rents via Legislation?
9 Politics, Law, and Policing in Reform Era China
10 Legality and the Hong Kong Protests
11 Policing the Police, Party, and State: Corruption and Anti-Corruption in China
12 Legality of Reprimand and Contest of Public Trust Amid the Pandemic: The Case of the Inadvertent Whistleblower Li Wenliang
Part 4 Conclusion
13 Chinese Law in a Comparative Context
Index