Based on an eleven-month fieldwork of an informal real estate market in Shenzhen, China, this paper focuses on how property norms interact with the fragmented and layered property laws. It also serves as a case study of the mixture of tragedies and comedies of collective land governance in China, defining the direct conflict between law and social norms as a tragedy and their reconciliation as a comedy. The term tragicomedy captures such a mixture. This paper reveals that the different identities that village leaders simultaneously assume under different social control systems are key to understanding the co-evolution of property law and norms. It also highlights the essential roles of the laws and communities’ legal strategies in governing...
Property relations in contemporary Tibet are often ambiguous. Their fuzziness has origins in both th...
Social Science Research Network, 2010, Working Paper Series, Abstract no. 1615499, p. 1-40. Availabl...
This article explores the tensions between China’s newly privatized model of urban housing ownership...
Based on an eleven-month fieldwork of an informal real estate market in Shenzhen, China, this paper ...
This research investigates a market of informal real estate in China, referenced by the term “small ...
When the collective declines, who manages the collective-owned land? When the socialist state fails,...
This paper contributes to the debate over land tenure in rural China by conceptualizing and measurin...
This chapter proceeds as follows. Section I recounts the history of Chinese land law from the foundi...
The premise of this paper is that in order to understand contemporary concepts and institutions of ...
In the economic transition of the past decades, China has seen remarkable economic growth without ro...
Land reallocations have been severely restricted in rural China since 1998. Nevertheless, land conti...
Peer reviewed: TrueFunder: the Humanities and Social Science Fieldwork Grant (University of Cambridg...
This paper contributes to the debate over land in rural China by conceptualizing and measuring multi...
The enforcement of China’s new takings law has failed. In the unbalanced tug-of-war between individ...
The focus of this study is the property rights theories tested in the context of Modern China’s rura...
Property relations in contemporary Tibet are often ambiguous. Their fuzziness has origins in both th...
Social Science Research Network, 2010, Working Paper Series, Abstract no. 1615499, p. 1-40. Availabl...
This article explores the tensions between China’s newly privatized model of urban housing ownership...
Based on an eleven-month fieldwork of an informal real estate market in Shenzhen, China, this paper ...
This research investigates a market of informal real estate in China, referenced by the term “small ...
When the collective declines, who manages the collective-owned land? When the socialist state fails,...
This paper contributes to the debate over land tenure in rural China by conceptualizing and measurin...
This chapter proceeds as follows. Section I recounts the history of Chinese land law from the foundi...
The premise of this paper is that in order to understand contemporary concepts and institutions of ...
In the economic transition of the past decades, China has seen remarkable economic growth without ro...
Land reallocations have been severely restricted in rural China since 1998. Nevertheless, land conti...
Peer reviewed: TrueFunder: the Humanities and Social Science Fieldwork Grant (University of Cambridg...
This paper contributes to the debate over land in rural China by conceptualizing and measuring multi...
The enforcement of China’s new takings law has failed. In the unbalanced tug-of-war between individ...
The focus of this study is the property rights theories tested in the context of Modern China’s rura...
Property relations in contemporary Tibet are often ambiguous. Their fuzziness has origins in both th...
Social Science Research Network, 2010, Working Paper Series, Abstract no. 1615499, p. 1-40. Availabl...
This article explores the tensions between China’s newly privatized model of urban housing ownership...