Code, custom, and legal practice in China the Qing and the Republic compared

Inhalt: 1. Introduction (S. 1) -- I. From Qing to Guomindang Law: 2. Civil Law in the Late Qing and the Early Republic: The Revised Qing Code (S. 15) ; 3. Institutional and Procedural Changes in the Late Qing and the Early Republic (S. 31) ; 4. The Guomindang Civil Code of 1929-30 (S. 49) -- II. Qin...

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: Huang, Philip C. (VerfasserIn)
Format: UnknownFormat
Sprache:eng
Veröffentlicht: Stanford, Calif. Standford Univ. Press 2001
Schriftenreihe:Law, society, and culture in China
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Zusammenfassung:Inhalt: 1. Introduction (S. 1) -- I. From Qing to Guomindang Law: 2. Civil Law in the Late Qing and the Early Republic: The Revised Qing Code (S. 15) ; 3. Institutional and Procedural Changes in the Late Qing and the Early Republic (S. 31) ; 4. The Guomindang Civil Code of 1929-30 (S. 49) -- II. Qing and Guomindang Civil Justice Compared: 5. Dian (S. 71); 6. Topsoil Ownership (S. 99); 7. Debt (S. 119) ; 8. Old-Age Support (S. 136); 9. Women's Choices Under Qing Law: Marriage and Illicit Sex (S. 155); 10. Women's Choices Under Guomindang Law: Marriage, Divorce, and Adultery (S. 180) -- 11. Conclusion (S. 201) -- Appendix (S. 217) -- References (S. 219) -- Character List (S. 229) -- Index (S. 237).
Beschreibung:Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke
Includes bibliographical references (p. [219]-228) and index
Publisher's description: The book asks the question: What changes occurred and what remained the same in Chinese civil justice from the Qing to the Republic? Civil justice is here interpreted to mean not only codified law but also actual legal practice. Since the consequences of court actions frequently differed from the codes intent, this book also addresses the question of how legal practice mediated between code and custom. It aims to track the developing history of the legal system and to discover what it meant in the lives of the Chinese people. Part One covers the revising of the Qing code and the drafting of new codes, especially the Civil Code of 1929-30, the major institutional changes that preceded the promulgation of new laws, and the organizing principles of those laws. Part Two, the main body of the text, uses case records from both the Qing and the Republic to examine certain topics that engendered frequent litigation: conditional sales of land, topsoil ownership, debt, old-age support, and womens choices in marriage, divorce, and illicit sex. The book demonstrates the contrasting logics of Qing and Republican law: of privileges granted by the absolutist ruler versus rights independent of the will of the ruler, of a survival ethic versus a capitalist one, of patrifamilial property versus individual property, of reciprocal parent-child support versus unidirectional support, and of partial and limited choice for women versus independent agency. The book shows, however, that in actual practice the new legal systems made many accommodations to traditional customs, thus making major concessions to social realities while still holding to radically different principles.
Beschreibung:IX, 246 S.
ISBN:0804741115
0804741107