Lao-zi has made a special contribution in developing rules and basics of law. His doctrine promotes the idea of government by non-government, not through laws, attributing the problems and conflicts that arise in a society overloaded enforcement. In Daoism it is considered that law of nature is unchanging and eternal, and the laws governing all things are changeless. Lao-zi contends that codified rules and laws result in a society that is more difficult to care for. The more ordinances and laws, the more robbers and thieves there will be
Challenging the Western scholarship’s conventional assumption that law in imperial China was used as...
The article is devoted to the generalizing given the principles of power, management and development...
Published as Chapter 17 in Buddhism and Law: An Introduction, Rebecca Redwood French & Mark A. Natha...
Confucius's ideas are a basic element in the thinking and evolution of mankind, bringing a very impo...
This thesis brings forward a phenomenon and one question. The phenomenon is that, in China, laws are...
Of the many and varied institutions which make up a particular culture or society, enabling it to su...
This study is a prolongation of a reflection of the author on the spirit of traditional chinese law....
The 1920s and 1930s saw discussions of Chinese legal discourse shift from being premised on the rule...
Concepts originating as religious principles have long had an impact on the structure and functionin...
Metadata onlyWritten over 2,500 years ago, The Dao De Jing is the seminal work of the Great Chinese ...
The article deals with the development of the legal system of the People’s Republic of China at the...
With the legal profession today there is a growing interest in Vthe study of universal legal ideas. ...
It has frequently been remarked that of all nations, China approaches most nearly the Jeffersonian i...
— The rule of law in China: on the margins of a bureaucratic and absolutist empire (1978-2014) — The...
This article analyzes the law dissemination campaign (pufa huodong) that China has implemented for a...
Challenging the Western scholarship’s conventional assumption that law in imperial China was used as...
The article is devoted to the generalizing given the principles of power, management and development...
Published as Chapter 17 in Buddhism and Law: An Introduction, Rebecca Redwood French & Mark A. Natha...
Confucius's ideas are a basic element in the thinking and evolution of mankind, bringing a very impo...
This thesis brings forward a phenomenon and one question. The phenomenon is that, in China, laws are...
Of the many and varied institutions which make up a particular culture or society, enabling it to su...
This study is a prolongation of a reflection of the author on the spirit of traditional chinese law....
The 1920s and 1930s saw discussions of Chinese legal discourse shift from being premised on the rule...
Concepts originating as religious principles have long had an impact on the structure and functionin...
Metadata onlyWritten over 2,500 years ago, The Dao De Jing is the seminal work of the Great Chinese ...
The article deals with the development of the legal system of the People’s Republic of China at the...
With the legal profession today there is a growing interest in Vthe study of universal legal ideas. ...
It has frequently been remarked that of all nations, China approaches most nearly the Jeffersonian i...
— The rule of law in China: on the margins of a bureaucratic and absolutist empire (1978-2014) — The...
This article analyzes the law dissemination campaign (pufa huodong) that China has implemented for a...
Challenging the Western scholarship’s conventional assumption that law in imperial China was used as...
The article is devoted to the generalizing given the principles of power, management and development...
Published as Chapter 17 in Buddhism and Law: An Introduction, Rebecca Redwood French & Mark A. Natha...