How courts and judges in authoritarian regimes decide cases behind closed doors has rarely been studied, but it is critically important in comparative judicial studies. Primarily drawing on the minutes of the adjudication committee in a lower court in China, this article explores its operational patterns and decision-making process. The data suggest that among the criminal cases reviewed by the committee, very few were difficult or significant, but a relatively high percentage of the suggested opinions of the adjudicating judges was modified. In contrast, many civil cases reviewed were difficult to resolve but the committee offered little assistance. Overall the operation and decision-making of the committee were subsumed by the administrat...
The last twenty years of Chinese legal reforms have been particularly interesting to scholars and ac...
This article explores the transformation of the Chinese Supreme People’s Court (“Court”) from a stat...
Lawsuits against the government form a part of the regular functioning of legal systems in democrati...
Based on participatory observations of trials and extensive interviews with judges, this article exa...
This dissertation is the outcome of author’s observations and empirical research on judicial reform ...
This thesis examines the nature and extent of judicial independence in China. In particular, it focu...
Local Chinese courts commonly use responsibility systems (mubiao guanli zeren zhi, zeren zhuijiu zhi...
Chinese courtsâ recent refusal to take on some disputes raises questions on the extent to which they...
This article traces the evolution of published Chinese court judgments from the early to late 1990s,...
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...
Recent developments in China’s courts reflect a paradox largely avoided in literature on the subject...
Sensitive cases exist in different historical periods, and they are closely linked to the economic a...
This article examines one-year of publicly available criminal judgments from one basic-level rural c...
This article uses a Positive Political Economy approach to understand the development of judicial re...
The last twenty years of Chinese legal reforms have been particularly interesting to scholars and ac...
This article explores the transformation of the Chinese Supreme People’s Court (“Court”) from a stat...
Lawsuits against the government form a part of the regular functioning of legal systems in democrati...
Based on participatory observations of trials and extensive interviews with judges, this article exa...
This dissertation is the outcome of author’s observations and empirical research on judicial reform ...
This thesis examines the nature and extent of judicial independence in China. In particular, it focu...
Local Chinese courts commonly use responsibility systems (mubiao guanli zeren zhi, zeren zhuijiu zhi...
Chinese courtsâ recent refusal to take on some disputes raises questions on the extent to which they...
This article traces the evolution of published Chinese court judgments from the early to late 1990s,...
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...
Recent developments in China’s courts reflect a paradox largely avoided in literature on the subject...
Sensitive cases exist in different historical periods, and they are closely linked to the economic a...
This article examines one-year of publicly available criminal judgments from one basic-level rural c...
This article uses a Positive Political Economy approach to understand the development of judicial re...
The last twenty years of Chinese legal reforms have been particularly interesting to scholars and ac...
This article explores the transformation of the Chinese Supreme People’s Court (“Court”) from a stat...
Lawsuits against the government form a part of the regular functioning of legal systems in democrati...