The China Jurist Series aims to ease part of this inequity by introducing leading law scholars from China to an Anglophone audience. Each year, in consultation with the editors of the Pacific Rim Law & Policy Journal, I will translate an article or a book chapter from a leading Chinese law scholar. In particular, the translated piece will highlight major breakthroughs, concerns, developments, setbacks or otherwise notable features of contemporary Chinese law
In Part I of this Article, I examine the recent attempt of the prominent comparative law scholar Ugo...
Whitmore Gray is the Law School\u27s China connection; Elizabeth Brown studies the nineteenth-centur...
The People’s Republic of China (PRC) has begun to use sanctions against people who speak out against...
The rise of international and comparative law within the typical law school curriculum has been a pr...
This special issue of the University of Pennsylvania Asian Law Review builds on the journal’s proud ...
The number of Chinese lawyers and law schools is burgeoning as China\u27s legal system undergoes sig...
Modern legal education began in China late in the Qing dynasty (1644-1911), and then expanded during...
I first survey the development and current state of the field by reviewing American scholarship on s...
Chinese law-making in recent years has been nothing less than remarkable and presents a new challeng...
Recently, Chinese leaders have begun to promote the development of legal standards andformal legal i...
I have been studying Chinese law since the early 1960s – some have said that I began before there wa...
What can the study of Chinese law bring to the study of China itself? This Article first distills wh...
Ever since the death of the great helmsman , father of the Chinese Communist Party, Mao Zedong, in ...
I am pleased to write in honor of Bill Jones by reflecting here on the study of Chinese law, which h...
When I am asked to write on the law in China, I take it I am to use the term law in a wide sense, ...
In Part I of this Article, I examine the recent attempt of the prominent comparative law scholar Ugo...
Whitmore Gray is the Law School\u27s China connection; Elizabeth Brown studies the nineteenth-centur...
The People’s Republic of China (PRC) has begun to use sanctions against people who speak out against...
The rise of international and comparative law within the typical law school curriculum has been a pr...
This special issue of the University of Pennsylvania Asian Law Review builds on the journal’s proud ...
The number of Chinese lawyers and law schools is burgeoning as China\u27s legal system undergoes sig...
Modern legal education began in China late in the Qing dynasty (1644-1911), and then expanded during...
I first survey the development and current state of the field by reviewing American scholarship on s...
Chinese law-making in recent years has been nothing less than remarkable and presents a new challeng...
Recently, Chinese leaders have begun to promote the development of legal standards andformal legal i...
I have been studying Chinese law since the early 1960s – some have said that I began before there wa...
What can the study of Chinese law bring to the study of China itself? This Article first distills wh...
Ever since the death of the great helmsman , father of the Chinese Communist Party, Mao Zedong, in ...
I am pleased to write in honor of Bill Jones by reflecting here on the study of Chinese law, which h...
When I am asked to write on the law in China, I take it I am to use the term law in a wide sense, ...
In Part I of this Article, I examine the recent attempt of the prominent comparative law scholar Ugo...
Whitmore Gray is the Law School\u27s China connection; Elizabeth Brown studies the nineteenth-centur...
The People’s Republic of China (PRC) has begun to use sanctions against people who speak out against...