Embedded Courts
Judicial Decision-Making in China
- Authors:
- Kwai Hang Ng, University of California, San Diego
- Xin He, City University of Hong Kong
- Date Published: December 2018
- availability: Available
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781108430364
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Embedded Courts is laden with tension. Chinese courts are organized as a singular and unified system yet grassroots courts in urban and rural regions differ greatly in the way they use the law and are as diverse as the populations they serve. Based on extensive fieldwork and in-depth interviews, this book offers a penetrating discussion of the operation of Chinese courts. It explains how Chinese judges rule and how the law is not the only script they follow - political, administrative, social and economic factors all influence verdicts. This landmark work will revise our understanding of the role of law in China - one that cannot be easily understood through the standard lens of judicial independence and separation of powers. Ng and He make clear the struggle facing frontline judges as they bridge the gap between a rule-based application of law and an instrumentalist view that prioritizes stability maintenance.
Read more- Studies Chinese courts in action in order to better understand the Chinese legal system
- Adopts a sociological perspective which addresses internal variations among Chinese courts
- Provides empirical analysis and first-hand interviews with judges and court officials to determine the logic governing decision-making
Awards
- Winner, 2018 Distinguished Book Award, Asian Law and Society Association
Reviews & endorsements
'It is a book about the growing heterogeneity and transformation of the Chinese court system, in relation to the nature of China's partystate and the changing social, political, and economic environment … Through this analytical framework, disparate strands of researches on Chinese courts can be brought together. This book provides an important touchstone for researches on Chinese courts for years to come.' Juan Wang, Journal of Chinese Political Science
See more reviews'Every good book raises as many questions as it answers, and this is a very good book. The most obvious concern China, and Embedded Courts will be required reading for those interested in China.' Frank K. Upham, Law & Social Inquiry
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×Product details
- Date Published: December 2018
- format: Paperback
- isbn: 9781108430364
- length: 1081 pages
- dimensions: 230 x 150 x 15 mm
- weight: 0.38kg
- availability: Available
Table of Contents
1. Chinese courts as embedded institutions
2. The daily rounds of frontline judges
3. Cohorts of judges
4. Administrative embeddedness - the vertical hierarchy of control
5. Political embeddedness - courts as a stability maintenance agency
6. Social embeddedness - ties from within and from without
7. Economic embeddedness - the political economy of court finances
8. Conclusion
9. Methodological appendix.
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