Based on participatory observations of trials and extensive interviews with judges, this article examines the operation patterns of the civil justice process in China and explores the underlying reasons behind. It finds that, despite the reform efforts placing more responsibility on the litigants, the Chinese civil proceeding remains largely inquisitorial. The decline of out-court investigation is evident, yet judges rely on a limited form of cross-examination aimed to obtain oral testimony that can be used to justify a decision. This kind of judge-initiated questioning becomes an inexpensive substitute for the previously labor-intensive court investigation. The article further argues that the judges do not adjudicate based on whatever evid...
This review examines the literature on procedural justice and the fair trial over the past two decad...
In recent years, international civil litigation in China has been on the rise. This trend will inevi...
Chinese courtsâ recent refusal to take on some disputes raises questions on the extent to which they...
Based on in-depth fieldwork investigations and extensive interviews, this article demonstrates that ...
This article examines one-year of publicly available criminal judgments from one basic-level rural c...
This article shows that Chinese adjudication is in a dilemma: on one hand, the judicial discretion i...
My dissertation explores the role of courts in making the law respond to the social and economic tra...
How courts and judges in authoritarian regimes decide cases behind closed doors has rarely been stud...
This thesis examines the nature and extent of judicial independence in China. In particular, it focu...
This article traces the evolution of published Chinese court judgments from the early to late 1990s,...
The last twenty years of Chinese legal reforms have been particularly interesting to scholars and ac...
This dissertation is the outcome of author’s observations and empirical research on judicial reform ...
Session 10: Judges as Legislators?China has been discussed in international literatures as a transit...
© Cambridge University Press 2010. Despite the passage of hundreds of laws and the expansion of the...
This article compares and contrasts the pre-trial discovery mechanisms used in China and the United ...
This review examines the literature on procedural justice and the fair trial over the past two decad...
In recent years, international civil litigation in China has been on the rise. This trend will inevi...
Chinese courtsâ recent refusal to take on some disputes raises questions on the extent to which they...
Based on in-depth fieldwork investigations and extensive interviews, this article demonstrates that ...
This article examines one-year of publicly available criminal judgments from one basic-level rural c...
This article shows that Chinese adjudication is in a dilemma: on one hand, the judicial discretion i...
My dissertation explores the role of courts in making the law respond to the social and economic tra...
How courts and judges in authoritarian regimes decide cases behind closed doors has rarely been stud...
This thesis examines the nature and extent of judicial independence in China. In particular, it focu...
This article traces the evolution of published Chinese court judgments from the early to late 1990s,...
The last twenty years of Chinese legal reforms have been particularly interesting to scholars and ac...
This dissertation is the outcome of author’s observations and empirical research on judicial reform ...
Session 10: Judges as Legislators?China has been discussed in international literatures as a transit...
© Cambridge University Press 2010. Despite the passage of hundreds of laws and the expansion of the...
This article compares and contrasts the pre-trial discovery mechanisms used in China and the United ...
This review examines the literature on procedural justice and the fair trial over the past two decad...
In recent years, international civil litigation in China has been on the rise. This trend will inevi...
Chinese courtsâ recent refusal to take on some disputes raises questions on the extent to which they...