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Law, Development, and Transition POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469 Prof. Susan Whiting
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Law, Development, and Transition POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Jan 06, 2016

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Law, Development, and Transition POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469. Prof. Susan Whiting. Using the Chinese experience to study law, development, and transition. Law is typically—if unreflectively—studied with reference to a particular system Chinese experience Authoritarian regime - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Law, Development, and Transition

POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Prof. Susan Whiting

Page 2: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Using the Chinese experience to study law, development, and transition

• Law is typically—if unreflectively—studied with reference to a particular system

• Chinese experience– Authoritarian regime• Role of law in supporting or transforming political power

– Post-socialist transition• Role of law in market transition (from plan to market)

– Developing country• Role of law in promoting economic growth

– East Asian country• Role of law in Confucian cultural tradition

Page 3: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Syllabus

Page 4: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Student handout

Page 5: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Presentation sign-up sheet

Page 6: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Introductions: me

Page 7: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469
Page 8: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469
Page 9: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469
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Page 12: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Introductions: you

• Name, major, year• Note any field experience w/ Asia, China, and

elsewhere• Note any experience with “the law”• What are your objectives in taking this class?• What do you hope to learn?

Page 13: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

1st reading assignment (handout and “heads up”)

• Remove 1st 4 pages from reader• Bohannan, “Ethnography and Comparison in

Legal Anthropology”– Excerpts– Skip: p. 412 (last 2 paragraphs) • SKIP: “As many another social anthropologist might…”

– Start again at: top of p. 417 • “To elucidate the immediate task…”

Page 14: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

“The People’s Court”

Page 15: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Watching “The People’s Court” (1)

• Is China implementing “Western-style legal reforms”? Is this true, possible, desirable?

Page 16: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Watching “The People’s Court” (2)

• We see the government and academia promoting expectations of “justice” (among law students, workers, farmers); what are some possible consequences of this (intended, unintended)?

Page 17: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Watching “The People’s Court” (3)

• We are told that half of all court judgments are enforced; is this percentage high or low? By what standard?

Page 18: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Watching “The People’s Court” (4)

• Not even the new property law makes property rights in rural land clear (who is “the village collective”?). Whose interests are served by such ambiguity?

Page 19: Law, Development, and  Transition  POLS/SISEA/LSJ 469

Watching “The People’s Court” (5)

• Note the discussion of the professionalization of the judiciary. There is an on-going debate in China today about whether rural judges should be highly trained legal professionals or people deeply embedded in the community and more attuned to community norms than “law.” Stay tuned!