Titre | Judicial Review of Government Actions in China | |
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Auteur | Wei Cui, Jie Cheng, Dominika Wiesner | |
Revue | China perspectives | |
Numéro | no 2019/1 Touching the Proverbial Elephant: The Multiple Shapes of Chinese Law | |
Rubrique / Thématique | Special feature |
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Page | 35-44 | |
Résumé anglais |
The judicial review of government actions is often used as a bellwether of the government's attitude towards the rule of law in China. Accordingly, in gauging the direction of legal reform in the Xi era, media reports have highlighted changes in litigation against government agencies as evidence of positive movement towards greater rule of law. We provide a selective review of changes in China's administrative litigation system in the last few years, giving special attention to the amendment in 2014 of the Administrative Litigation Law (ALL), and a 2018 Supreme People's Court Interpretation of the same statute. In our view, the question of whether lawsuits might be brought against the government has arguably been superseded in importance by the question of how courts will decide such lawsuits. And the generic notion of judicial independence itself no longer sheds sufficient light on actual and possible judicial responses. Using the purportedly expanded scope of review of informal policy directives as an example, we show that symbolism-motivated advocacy to improve the administrative litigation in China may come at the expense of protecting the non-symbolic functions of judicial review, e.g., the coherence of law and consistency in the delivery of justice. Source : Éditeur (via OpenEdition Journals) |
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Article en ligne | http://journals.openedition.org/chinaperspectives/8703 |