Traditional Chinese forms of communal landholding, t’so and t’ong, are habitually referred to by judges and authors as trusts. This article investigates the basis for this description and examines whether and to what extent the description is legally accurate. It concludes that there is considerable doubt as to whether they really are trusts.published_or_final_versio
Edited by: Ying Khai Liew and Matthew Harding Reviewed by: Joyman Lee Publisher: Hart Publishing ...
In the English trust, the beneficiary is viewed as the substantive owner of property held under trus...
This article examines the idea of the “irreducible core” of trustee duties in relation to East Asian...
The common law trust institution always encounters modifications when it is transplanted to civil la...
China transplanted English trust law in 2001. This article examines the judgment of a recent case de...
English trusts are founded on the historical and doctrinal basis of equity and its consequent divisi...
In two recent cases heard together by the Court of Final Appeal, the court held that a trust arising...
For China, the trust is not an indigenous legal institution. In 2001, the enactment of Trust Law of ...
In recent years, a number of Singapore cases have come to the attention of common law trust lawyers ...
A recent Chinese commentator on the Trust Law summed up the potential value of trusts with the so-ca...
The thesis examines the principal doctrinal features of trusts in Japan and Quebec from an English l...
The public trust doctrine is a traditional common law principle stating that certain resources are c...
With China\u27s restrictions on directly granting loans to real estate companies and the restriction...
A main characteristic of the common law trust is the concept of dual ownership. This concept establi...
Trusts in Hong Kong are primarily regulated under the principles derived from rules of equity supple...
Edited by: Ying Khai Liew and Matthew Harding Reviewed by: Joyman Lee Publisher: Hart Publishing ...
In the English trust, the beneficiary is viewed as the substantive owner of property held under trus...
This article examines the idea of the “irreducible core” of trustee duties in relation to East Asian...
The common law trust institution always encounters modifications when it is transplanted to civil la...
China transplanted English trust law in 2001. This article examines the judgment of a recent case de...
English trusts are founded on the historical and doctrinal basis of equity and its consequent divisi...
In two recent cases heard together by the Court of Final Appeal, the court held that a trust arising...
For China, the trust is not an indigenous legal institution. In 2001, the enactment of Trust Law of ...
In recent years, a number of Singapore cases have come to the attention of common law trust lawyers ...
A recent Chinese commentator on the Trust Law summed up the potential value of trusts with the so-ca...
The thesis examines the principal doctrinal features of trusts in Japan and Quebec from an English l...
The public trust doctrine is a traditional common law principle stating that certain resources are c...
With China\u27s restrictions on directly granting loans to real estate companies and the restriction...
A main characteristic of the common law trust is the concept of dual ownership. This concept establi...
Trusts in Hong Kong are primarily regulated under the principles derived from rules of equity supple...
Edited by: Ying Khai Liew and Matthew Harding Reviewed by: Joyman Lee Publisher: Hart Publishing ...
In the English trust, the beneficiary is viewed as the substantive owner of property held under trus...
This article examines the idea of the “irreducible core” of trustee duties in relation to East Asian...