In Court Reform on Trial: Why Simple Solutions Fail, Malcolm Feeley identified a number of obstacles that undermine reforms of the United States court system. Feeley’s proposed solution was to adopt a problem-oriented “rights strategy”—letting the courts themselves solve their problems through litigation. This is because litigation is a forum in which courts are well placed to identify specific problems and devise pragmatic solutions. This Article takes a look at this proposition in the context of court reforms in China and concludes that courts (and law) are also a reflection of national goals and identity. Any reforms to a court system must not only take into consideration expectations and realistic goals, but also the fundamental identit...
Most recent Western popular and scholarly writing on legal reform in China has focused on two appare...
This thesis focuses on the current court mediation institution in China against the worldwide movem...
The Chinese law and its courts were essentially modeled after or adopted from those prevalent in Con...
This essay examines the development of China\u27s courts over the past decade. Although court caselo...
This research studies the responses of two lower-level courts, one in rural and the other in urban C...
I am honored to have my book, Court Reform on Trial: Why Simple Solutions Fail, serve as the organiz...
China has undertaken a program of widespread legal reform since the end of the Cultural Revolution ...
This essay surveys recent developments in China’s courts. Part I examines recent top-down reforms in...
Chinese authorities are reconsidering legal reforms they enacted in the 1980s and 1990s. These refor...
The last twenty years of Chinese legal reforms have been particularly interesting to scholars and ac...
The modern Chinese legal system has at least two notable features. First, bearing the civil law trad...
My dissertation explores the role of courts in making the law respond to the social and economic tra...
In the 1990s, the courts, in dealing with administrative cases, reinforced their function of helping...
China’s People’s Supreme Court has stated its commitment to reform its judicial system, and the linc...
This Article examines the character of Taiwan’s criminal court system and proposed court reforms. Ta...
Most recent Western popular and scholarly writing on legal reform in China has focused on two appare...
This thesis focuses on the current court mediation institution in China against the worldwide movem...
The Chinese law and its courts were essentially modeled after or adopted from those prevalent in Con...
This essay examines the development of China\u27s courts over the past decade. Although court caselo...
This research studies the responses of two lower-level courts, one in rural and the other in urban C...
I am honored to have my book, Court Reform on Trial: Why Simple Solutions Fail, serve as the organiz...
China has undertaken a program of widespread legal reform since the end of the Cultural Revolution ...
This essay surveys recent developments in China’s courts. Part I examines recent top-down reforms in...
Chinese authorities are reconsidering legal reforms they enacted in the 1980s and 1990s. These refor...
The last twenty years of Chinese legal reforms have been particularly interesting to scholars and ac...
The modern Chinese legal system has at least two notable features. First, bearing the civil law trad...
My dissertation explores the role of courts in making the law respond to the social and economic tra...
In the 1990s, the courts, in dealing with administrative cases, reinforced their function of helping...
China’s People’s Supreme Court has stated its commitment to reform its judicial system, and the linc...
This Article examines the character of Taiwan’s criminal court system and proposed court reforms. Ta...
Most recent Western popular and scholarly writing on legal reform in China has focused on two appare...
This thesis focuses on the current court mediation institution in China against the worldwide movem...
The Chinese law and its courts were essentially modeled after or adopted from those prevalent in Con...