The Chinese Communist Party and People's Courts: Judicial Dependence in China

American Journal of Comparative Law - Tập 64 Số 1 - Trang 37-74 - 2016
Ling Li1
1Ling Li (李玲) is an associate professor at the Northwest University of Politics and Law in China and currently teaching at the University of Vienna as a visiting professor. She is the author of Performing “Bribery” in China—Guanxi-Practice, Corruption with a Human Face, The “Production” of Corruption in China’s Court, and The Rise of the Discipline and Inspection Commission, 1927–2012—Anti-corruption Investigation and Decision-Making in the Chinese Communist Party. She can be reached at . This article was written during my tenure at the U.S.–Asia Law Institute at the New York University School of Law. I wish to thank Jerome A. Cohen, Frank Upham, and Ira Belkin for their general support and valuable comments concerning this article. I also wish to thank Stephanie Balme and Jake Clark, both of whom read this article with great interest and offered constructive suggestions. Lastly, I am grateful to Jennifer Anderson and Aaron Fergie from this Journal for their meticulous copy-editing services

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