Introduction: The legal protection of human rights in Mainland China differs very sharply from the legal protection of human rights in Hong Kong. The legal protection of human rights depends upon a variety of matters. They include a legal system under which a citizen has access to independent and impartial courts for the determination of his or her rights. Under such a system, judicial power is exercised by judges who have judicial independence. Absent such a system, there can be no secure protection and enforcement of human rights, even if those rights are proclaimed and ostensibly guaranteed by statute. Indeed, in the absence of such a system, there can be no assurance that the rule of law, as we understand it, will be observed
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The question of linking China’s accession to international organizations such as the World Trade Org...
Panel Session 4: 135 H uman Dignity in East Asian CourtsThis paper considers the development of 'dig...
Since the United States and China have very different cultures and societies, differences in policie...
This paper presents a critical analysis of the current human rights protection for suspects in the c...
After more than three decades of legal reform under a promotion of the rule of law, it is opportune ...
This article explores the implementation of human rights treaties by courts in the People's Rep...
This study intends to examine, from a socio-legal perspective, the different ways of individual righ...
There is an apprehension in the democratic world about the possible impact of the economic rise of C...
How do Chinese people defend human rights in China without going to jail? How can they seek justice ...
This Article explores the human rights forecast following Hong Kong\u27s reintegration into China. T...
From May 31 to June 13, 1999, the Joseph R. Crowley Program in International Human Rights (or “deleg...
Twenty-one years after Hong Kong reverted to Chinese sovereignty, the jury of China’s experiment of ...
The question of linking China’s accession to international organizations such as the World Trade Org...
Dès le sixième siècle avant J.-C. l’homme a été défini comme un « être d’une certaine hauteur, dont ...
This paper examines why the People's Republic of China is wary of international human rights law and...
The question of linking China’s accession to international organizations such as the World Trade Org...
Panel Session 4: 135 H uman Dignity in East Asian CourtsThis paper considers the development of 'dig...
Since the United States and China have very different cultures and societies, differences in policie...
This paper presents a critical analysis of the current human rights protection for suspects in the c...