Law under the Court: Legal Traditions and Crime in Chinese History
MTA
Criminal justice, civil law, and legal institutions from medieval codes to modern reforms
2nd Edition
*Law under the Court: Legal Traditions and Crime in Chinese History* provides a comprehensive longitudinal study of the Chinese legal system, tracing its evolution from the administrative engineering of the Qin and Han dynasties to the digital governance of the twenty-first century. The book examines the foundational role of the penal code and the subsequent "Confucianization" of law, which integrated moral rituals and family hierarchies into state statutes. By analyzing the sophisticated Sui-Tang codes and the pragmatic experiments of the Song and Yuan, the author illustrates how law functioned as a tool for both social control and fiscal stability, mediated by a complex bureaucracy of magistrates, clerks, and local brokers.
The narrative emphasizes that Chinese law was never a static set of rules but a lived process of negotiation between state power and social needs. Through the Ming and Qing periods, the book details the densification of legal precedents and the persistence of customary law and local mediation. It highlights how the yamen (government office) served as a critical hub where formal procedure met the "vernacular of grievance," and how the legal system balanced the harshness of penal tools like torture with a bureaucratic commitment to evidentiary discipline, forensics, and multi-tiered appellate reviews.
In the modern era, the book explores the profound ruptures and continuities brought about by the encounter with Western extraterritoriality, the Republican effort at codification, and the radical socialist transformation under the People’s Republic. It tracks the shift from Maoist mass justice campaigns to the post-1978 professionalization of the judiciary and the revival of civil law, culminating in the 2020 Civil Code. This transition reflects a move toward legal regularity and the protection of rights, even as the state maintains ultimate political oversight through institutionalized party leadership.
Finally, the work concludes by examining the contemporary "digital turn" in Chinese governance. It describes how ancient ambitions for social legibility have been realized through modern surveillance, algorithmic decision-making, and the Social Credit System. By linking these high-tech developments to historical practices of registration and moral policing, the book argues that China’s legal culture continues to evolve as a unique conversation between technological innovation, deep-seated administrative traditions, and the shifting requirements of national security and economic order.
MixCache.com
View booksMay 4, 2026
68,578 words
4 hours 48 minutes
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