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Book

The Making of Chinese Criminal Law

Book

The Making of Chinese Criminal Law

DOI link for The Making of Chinese Criminal Law

The Making of Chinese Criminal Law book

The Preventive Shift in the Context of the Eighth Amendment

The Making of Chinese Criminal Law

DOI link for The Making of Chinese Criminal Law

The Making of Chinese Criminal Law book

The Preventive Shift in the Context of the Eighth Amendment
ByYing Ji
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2021
eBook Published 9 March 2021
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003131441
Pages 182
eBook ISBN 9781003131441
Subjects Area Studies, Law, Social Sciences
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Ji, Y. (2021). The Making of Chinese Criminal Law: The Preventive Shift in the Context of the Eighth Amendment (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003131441

ABSTRACT

By examining the reasons behind the preventive criminalization of Chinese criminal law, this book argues that the shift of criminal law generates popular expectations of legislative participation, and meets punitive demands of the public, but the expansion of criminal law lacks effective constraints, which will keep restricting people’s freedom in the future.

The book is inspired by the eighth amendment of Chinese criminal law in 2011, which amended several penalties related to road, drug and environmental safety. It is on the eighth amendment that subsequent amendments have been based. The amendment stemmed from a series of nationally known incidents that triggered widespread public dissatisfaction with the Chinese criminal justice system. Based on John Kingdon’s theory of the multiple streams, the book explains the origins of the legislative process and its outcomes by examining the role of public opinion, policy experts and political actors in the making of Chinese criminal law. It argues that in authoritarian China, the prominence of risk control through criminal justice methods is a state response to uncertainties generated through reforms under the CCP’s leadership. The process of criminal lawmaking has become more responsive and inclusive than ever before, even though it remains a consultation with the elites within the framework set by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), including representatives of the Lianghui, government ministries, academics and others. The process enhances the CCP’s legitimacy by not only generating popular expectations of legislative participation, but also by meeting the punitive demands of the public.

The book will be of interest to academics and researchers in the areas of Chinese criminal law and comparative law.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|23 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|22 pages

Reforms in Chinese criminal law and their implications

chapter 3|14 pages

The history of lawmaking and the multiple streams approach

chapter 4|21 pages

Problem stream for Chinese criminal lawmaking

chapter 5|12 pages

Policy stream for Chinese criminal lawmaking

chapter 6|28 pages

Political stream for Chinese criminal lawmaking

Role of the CCP and the bureaucracy

chapter 7|15 pages

The role of the state in the criminal justice system

Through a comparative perspective

chapter 8|17 pages

Policy window of Chinese criminal lawmaking and conclusion

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