Contenu de l'article

Titre Law as a Sword, Law as a Shield
Auteur Sida Liu, Ching-Fang Hsu, Terence C. Halliday
Mir@bel Revue China perspectives
Numéro no 2019/1 Touching the Proverbial Elephant: The Multiple Shapes of Chinese Law
Rubrique / Thématique
Special feature
Page 65-73
Résumé anglais What does the rule of law mean in the Chinese context? Based on empirical research in Beijing and Hong Kong, this article examines the various ways politically liberal lawyers in China make sense of the rule of law in their discourses and collective action. Although the rule of law is frequently invoked by lawyers as a legitimating discourse against the authoritarian state, its use in practice is primarily for instrumental purposes, as both a sword and a shield. For activist lawyers in Beijing, the pursuit of judicial independence is nothing but a distant dream involving a restructuring of the state, and they therefore focus their mobilisation for rule of law around basic legal freedoms and the growth of civil society. By contrast, Hong Kong lawyers hold the autonomy of their judiciary as a paramount value mainly because it is a powerful defensive weapon against Beijing's political influence. The rule of law as a shield is only effective where its institutional and normative foundations are solid (as in Hong Kong), and it becomes little more than a blunt sword for lawyers where such foundations are weak or missing (as in mainland China).
Source : Éditeur (via OpenEdition Journals)
Article en ligne http://journals.openedition.org/chinaperspectives/8798