Today's extremely harsh sentencing regime in China, which includes extensive use of the death penalty, was triggered in particular by a moral panic about juvenile crime and to some extent economic crime in the early 1980s. The policy was justified by the belief that China was experiencing an extreme upsurge in crime. A critical look at Chinese crime rates over the last 25 years does not support this belief, however. Chinese reactions against crime instead have to be seen in terms of the regime's legitimacy and alleged defence of the social and moral order in a society undergoing rapid change.link_to_subscribed_fulltex
In a groundbreaking work, Klaus Mühlhahn offers a comprehensive examination of the criminal justice ...
Examining the crimes that have recently been of the greatest concern in China, the authors assess th...
China is rising aiming at the status of a great power. Yet internally the Chinese society is troubli...
Today's extremely harsh sentencing regime in China, which includes extensive use of the death penalt...
In the 1980s China began to witness a substantial increase in criminal activity - mainly as a conseq...
The allegation that punishment is a core element of culture does not seem to explain the rapid chang...
China’s penal code of 1997 is based on behavioral criminal law. The definition of crime is grounded...
Punishment in contemporary China has experienced dramatic shifts over the last seven decades or so. ...
In the past century, China has abandoned its feudal system, created a republic, ended the republic f...
Are the causes of youth crime the same in Western and Eastern countries? Western research based on S...
Throughout the history of the People's Republic of China criminal process and administrative sa...
This paper seeks to explore the crucial determinants that shape the Chinese legal system\u27s use of...
This article examines the penal development in China over the last six decades to understand the way...
Since 1978, economic modernization has been the national priority for the People's Republic of China...
China, by any reckoning, has the highest number of executions in the world amongst death penalty ret...
In a groundbreaking work, Klaus Mühlhahn offers a comprehensive examination of the criminal justice ...
Examining the crimes that have recently been of the greatest concern in China, the authors assess th...
China is rising aiming at the status of a great power. Yet internally the Chinese society is troubli...
Today's extremely harsh sentencing regime in China, which includes extensive use of the death penalt...
In the 1980s China began to witness a substantial increase in criminal activity - mainly as a conseq...
The allegation that punishment is a core element of culture does not seem to explain the rapid chang...
China’s penal code of 1997 is based on behavioral criminal law. The definition of crime is grounded...
Punishment in contemporary China has experienced dramatic shifts over the last seven decades or so. ...
In the past century, China has abandoned its feudal system, created a republic, ended the republic f...
Are the causes of youth crime the same in Western and Eastern countries? Western research based on S...
Throughout the history of the People's Republic of China criminal process and administrative sa...
This paper seeks to explore the crucial determinants that shape the Chinese legal system\u27s use of...
This article examines the penal development in China over the last six decades to understand the way...
Since 1978, economic modernization has been the national priority for the People's Republic of China...
China, by any reckoning, has the highest number of executions in the world amongst death penalty ret...
In a groundbreaking work, Klaus Mühlhahn offers a comprehensive examination of the criminal justice ...
Examining the crimes that have recently been of the greatest concern in China, the authors assess th...
China is rising aiming at the status of a great power. Yet internally the Chinese society is troubli...