This article compares and contrasts the pre-trial discovery mechanisms used in China and the United States, as well as the advantages and disadvantages of each. Although both use similar discovery tools, like requests to inspect evidence and expert examination of the parties, their discovery systems vary greatly. Ultimately, China prefers that judges largely conduct discovery, that the parties mutually select expert witnesses, and that the primary objective is to determine the truth, even at the expense of finality. Conversely, the United States prefers a much more adversarial system, in which the parties collect the evidence, submit motions to the court, and select partisan expert witnesses. Unlike China, the United States also gives subst...
To solve the low rates of witness testimony in court, coercion, and other problems, the National Peo...
This Issue Brief explores an oft-neglected irony in international e-discovery: the rationales used b...
In recent years, international civil litigation in China has been on the rise. This trend will inevi...
This article compares and contrasts the pre-trial discovery mechanisms used in China and the United ...
China’s People’s Supreme Court has stated its commitment to reform its judicial system, and the linc...
Based on participatory observations of trials and extensive interviews with judges, this article exa...
The scope of pretrial discovery in the United States (“U.S.”) is the most expansive of any common la...
On December 21, 2001, China\u27s Supreme People\u27s Court promulgated landmark rules concerning the...
In 2020 the Supreme People’s Court of China issued new regulations on civil litigation. The regulati...
U.S. Courts generally prefer applying the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure over The Hague Evidence C...
Chinese court cases have attained increasing importance in recent studies of Chinese law, but remain...
Wide-ranging pretrial discovery is an integral part of contemporaryAmerican civil litigation, partic...
China, like most other civil law countries, does not have a discrete evidence code. Rather, Chinese ...
The purpose of this volume is to present in a convenient and usable form a comparative study of the ...
The last few years have seen a proliferation of programs by Western states and international agencie...
To solve the low rates of witness testimony in court, coercion, and other problems, the National Peo...
This Issue Brief explores an oft-neglected irony in international e-discovery: the rationales used b...
In recent years, international civil litigation in China has been on the rise. This trend will inevi...
This article compares and contrasts the pre-trial discovery mechanisms used in China and the United ...
China’s People’s Supreme Court has stated its commitment to reform its judicial system, and the linc...
Based on participatory observations of trials and extensive interviews with judges, this article exa...
The scope of pretrial discovery in the United States (“U.S.”) is the most expansive of any common la...
On December 21, 2001, China\u27s Supreme People\u27s Court promulgated landmark rules concerning the...
In 2020 the Supreme People’s Court of China issued new regulations on civil litigation. The regulati...
U.S. Courts generally prefer applying the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure over The Hague Evidence C...
Chinese court cases have attained increasing importance in recent studies of Chinese law, but remain...
Wide-ranging pretrial discovery is an integral part of contemporaryAmerican civil litigation, partic...
China, like most other civil law countries, does not have a discrete evidence code. Rather, Chinese ...
The purpose of this volume is to present in a convenient and usable form a comparative study of the ...
The last few years have seen a proliferation of programs by Western states and international agencie...
To solve the low rates of witness testimony in court, coercion, and other problems, the National Peo...
This Issue Brief explores an oft-neglected irony in international e-discovery: the rationales used b...
In recent years, international civil litigation in China has been on the rise. This trend will inevi...