This article studies the rise of judicial review of local administrative monopolies in contemporary China. Anticompetitive abuses of power by local party-states, driven by corruption, have shaken the very foundations of the country’s administrative unity and market efficiency. The entrenched skepticism of the authoritarian party-state toward legal institutions notwithstanding, the Supreme People’s Court in Beijing has over the past decade steadily aggrandized its own and local courts’ authority to constrain regional protectionist, collusive fiefdoms in ways unforeseen by the drafters of the landmark Antimonopoly Law; returning incremental but genuine benefits to the central party-state, whose tacit acquiescence in judicial empowerment has o...
The mass publicity of court decisions in China, this article argues, is part of the larger trend of ...
This article shows that Chinese adjudication is in a dilemma: on one hand, the judicial discretion i...
© Cambridge University Press 2010. Despite the passage of hundreds of laws and the expansion of the...
This article uses a Positive Political Economy approach to understand the development of judicial re...
This article explores the transformation of the Chinese Supreme People’s Court (“Court”) from a stat...
Drawing on data from a mid-sized city in eastern China, this article examines interactions among the...
This article shows that Chinese adjudication is in a dilemma: on one hand, the judicial discretion i...
To many it seems anomalous that a communist regime like China would adopt an antitrust law. It seems...
Beth Farmer contributed the following chapter: Competition Policy in China: Trends in Private Civil...
Beth Farmer contributed the following chapter: Competition Policy in China: Trends in Private Civil...
By tracing the historical development of the relation between the Chinese Communist Party and China'...
Theme: Law and Society in the 21st Century: Transformations, Resistances, FuturesLocal protectionism...
This article will discuss the basic features of the competition regime China is ready to set up, as ...
The article provides a rare reconstruction of a number of early cases decided under the Chinese Anti...
This article will discuss the basic features of the competition regime China is ready to set up, as ...
The mass publicity of court decisions in China, this article argues, is part of the larger trend of ...
This article shows that Chinese adjudication is in a dilemma: on one hand, the judicial discretion i...
© Cambridge University Press 2010. Despite the passage of hundreds of laws and the expansion of the...
This article uses a Positive Political Economy approach to understand the development of judicial re...
This article explores the transformation of the Chinese Supreme People’s Court (“Court”) from a stat...
Drawing on data from a mid-sized city in eastern China, this article examines interactions among the...
This article shows that Chinese adjudication is in a dilemma: on one hand, the judicial discretion i...
To many it seems anomalous that a communist regime like China would adopt an antitrust law. It seems...
Beth Farmer contributed the following chapter: Competition Policy in China: Trends in Private Civil...
Beth Farmer contributed the following chapter: Competition Policy in China: Trends in Private Civil...
By tracing the historical development of the relation between the Chinese Communist Party and China'...
Theme: Law and Society in the 21st Century: Transformations, Resistances, FuturesLocal protectionism...
This article will discuss the basic features of the competition regime China is ready to set up, as ...
The article provides a rare reconstruction of a number of early cases decided under the Chinese Anti...
This article will discuss the basic features of the competition regime China is ready to set up, as ...
The mass publicity of court decisions in China, this article argues, is part of the larger trend of ...
This article shows that Chinese adjudication is in a dilemma: on one hand, the judicial discretion i...
© Cambridge University Press 2010. Despite the passage of hundreds of laws and the expansion of the...