113 research outputs found

    Chinese Workers’ Rising Rights-Consciousness

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    This document is part of a digital collection provided by the Martin P. Catherwood Library, ILR School, Cornell University, pertaining to the effects of globalization on the workplace worldwide. Special emphasis is placed on labor rights, working conditions, labor market changes, and union organizing.CLW_2010_Report_China_Chinese_workers.pdf: 12 downloads, before Oct. 1, 2020

    Bird in a Cage: Chinese Law Reform after Twenty Years

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    When I wrote in 1979, it was easy to summarize the state of Chinese legal institutions because they were so sparse. Although a judicial system had been created on the Soviet model in the 1950s, it had been politicized by the end of that decade after a brief period of liberalization, and then further wrecked by the Cultural Revolution. A new period of institution-building began in 1979; reconstruction of the courts began and the law schools, closed for a decade, reopened. Most fundamentally, the policies of the Chinese leadership seemed to promise, as I noted then, attempts to conceptualize and articulate notions of law as an objective set of rules and standards to protect rights. \u27 At the time, there was only promise; my article cited no legislation giving shape to new institutions, because none had yet appeared. The evidence of impending change seemed clear, promptingme to pose some questions about what might lie ahead in the future. My earlier speculations still seem timely today, and I have revisited them below in this article. I have surveyed Chinese law reform and the obstacles to further reform more extensively in a book, Bird in a Cage: Legal Reform in China After Mao, whose title I have borrowed and from which I have drawn for this article

    The Study of Chinese law in the United States: Reflections on the Past and Concerns about the Future

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    I first survey the development and current state of the field by reviewing American scholarship on some major areas of Chinese law from those early days up to the present. Then, against this background, I comment on the current scene and address the challenges that Chinese law continues to present to Western attempts at understanding China

    Equity Joint Ventures in China: New Legal Framework, Continuing Questions

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    Foreigners participating in equity joint ventures in the PRC since such investments were authorized in 1979 have encountered a variety of problems. New legal institutions have been established to provide a framework for joint ventures but their reach and interpretation of the new rules in practice are still often uncertain. Changes in policy have affected, and will continue to affect, the operation of both joint ventures and the new legal rules. Potential investors need contractual protection against changes in laws, regulations and policies which may affect the joint venture. Some specific issues of importance to foreign investors in China include access to the domestic market for sale of joint venture products and for purchase of goods and services, convertibility and repatriability of profits earned on the domestic market, the joint venture\u27s relationship to the state economic plan, valuation of land used by joint ventures, and the level of wages and benefits to be paid to Chinese employees. After ventures are established misunderstandings may arise because of differences between the parties\u27 management styles as well as their different conceptions of the obligations created in their contract. Given variations in practice, changes in policy, and the limitations and continued flexibility of Chinese legal institutions, participants in joint ventures should carefully investigate each opportunity offered to them and insist on drafting contracts which adequately address likely problem areas. The Chinese leadership has taken important steps in creating a legal framework for foreign economic activity, but existing questions are likely to be solved only slowly

    The Uncertain Future of Legal Reform in China

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    This talk looks at how far Chinese law reform has come since 1979, possible further reforms, and obstacles to meaningful reform

    Mao and Mediation: Politics and Dispute Resolution in Communist China

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    We lack much essential knowledge, not only about Chinese Communist legal institutions, but about Chinese society generally – how it is organized, how power is distributed and wielded, and the nature of even the most ordinary relationships. Such ignorance is dangerous, especially when China and the United States, and their perceptions of each other, remain tragically far apart. An analysis of China\u27s institutions for resolving disputes can teach much about its dominant values and authority relationships. This Article examines the resolution of disputes between individuals in China, relying on documentary sources and on interviews conducted by the author in Mandarin with fifty Chinese emigres in Hong Kong from 1965 through 1967. The Article has several primary goals. By closely analyzing Chinese institutions that have hitherto been inadequately described in the West, it seeks to show how the disagreements, fights, and quarrels of ordinary people in China are settled. Further, it attempts to define Chinese Communist concepts of social conflict and social control, to deepen understanding of the Chinese institutions which manage conflict and exercise control, and to explore the functions of dispute resolution under Communism. Finally, this study compares traditional Chinese and Communist Chinese modes of dispute resolution

    The Unrecognized Government in American Courts: \u3cem\u3eUpright v. Mercury Business Machines\u3c/em\u3e

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    What right have I, as the King\u27s Judge, to interfere upon the subject of a contract with a country which he does not recognize? Lord Eldon\u27s words, written in 1823, have been echoed more than once by American judges, who have been as troubled as Eldon by problems complicated by diplomatic nonrecognition. Twentieth-century wars and revolutions have required American courts to decide whether unrecognized governments, entities created by them, their representatives, or their assignees could sue in domestic courts, often on matters of private right. Frequently, too, the courts have been perplexed by the effect of nonrecognition on the application of foreign laws and decrees. Uncertain of the consequences that should flow from nonrecognition, the courts have often responded as Eldon did; alarmed by the suggestion that their recognition of a government might conflict with executive nonrecognition, they have frequently endeavor-d to treat unrecognized governments as nonexistent. In addition, the courts have often emulated Lord Eldon, in their own fashion, by hastily deferring \u27to supposedly overriding considerations of foreign policy as expressed, at times, by the State Department. Only rarely have they evaluated .in a sophisticated manner the basis in policy and precedent for taking judicial cognizance, in any context, of an unrecognized government. As long as trade and other contacts with unrecognized countries are not prohibited, these questions of doctrine and judicial technique will be presented to the courts. They have most recently been raised and provocatively discussed by the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York in Upright v. Mercury Business Machs. Co. To some extent Upright is a welcome departure from past decisions; in other respects it bears an unfortunate resemblance to them. This article will discuss Upright and some of its implications and contradictions, with the hope of contributing to a clarification of some of the problems that nonrecognition has persistently created for American courts and will consider a method that the courts may use in meeting those problems

    Legal Uncertainty in Foreign Investment in China: Causes and Management

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    My talk today will be based on an article – “Looking for Law in China” – that was published last year. In it, looked at Chinese law from the perspective of foreign investors that have had to cope with the uncertainty of a business environment in which legal institutions have been vague, incomplete and weak. I wrote, and today speak to you, from under two hats, that of a scholar and that of practicing lawyer, since for over thirty years I have combined those two careers. My observations here, then, are not just those from the academic ivory tower but from what is laughingly known as real life. The problems I will discuss reflect not only those of foreign investors but general characteristics of Chinese legal institutions. I am going to compress my summary of essential points so that I can have time to speculate on the prospects for Chinese law reform overall, not just as it affects foreigners, and I am going to interweave some of my speculations with my summary of the essential points in the article

    On Understanding Chinese Law and Legal Institutions

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    Our unfamiliarity with Chinese legal institutions and policies toward law causes misunderstanding of the role of law in the People\u27s Republic of China. The present unimportance of the formal legal system has deep historical reasons. As China\u27s economy becomes more complex, regularity should increase, although it will remain controversial. In commercial contracts with the West, custom performs the role of law

    He Jiahong, \u3cem\u3eBack From the Dead: Wrongful Convictions and Criminal Justice in China\u3c/em\u3e

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    1In 1987, Teng Xingshan was sentenced to death for raping a woman and dismembering her body; wrongfully convicted, he was executed in 1989 – but in 1992 the “victim” returned home, and Teng was exonerated in 2005. His case is only one among numerous other tragic wrongful convictions discussed in Back From the Dead: Wrongful Convictions and Criminal Justice in China, by Professor He Jiahong (Renmin University Law School, Beijing). This book, the product of ten years of research, is a scholarly analysis of wrongful convictions that demonstrates deep system-wide flaws in China’s criminal justice system
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