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Chinese Legal System - LAWS3123 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Description SHANGHAI SUMMER SCHOOL – July 2010 For more information of the Shanghai Summer School program, please refer to:
www.law.unsw.edu.au/Current_Students/forms/2010/Shanghai_Summer_School_Info_Sheet_2010.pdf This is a two-week intensive course held in Beijing and/or Shanghai each year. It provides an introduction into the legal system of the People's Republic of China with particular reference to modern developments in contract and commercial law. China opened up its economy to market forces only in the late 1970s. When it did so, law and the legal system lost the pariah status to which they had been assigned during the Proletarian Cultural Revolution. The course examines the role law is playing in modern China by reference to its historical antecedents. The course examines particular areas of development not only for their own sake but also as indicators of the changing role of law in Chinese society. Areas which are the subject of particular attention include: the elements and institutions of Chinese legal system; the role of law in Chinese society from the perspectives of legal history and philosophy; contract law; intellectual property law; foreign investment law; corporate and securities law; foreign trade law and mediation, arbitration and civil enforcement procedures. Recommended Prior Knowledge None
Course Objectives
Main Topics
Assessment This subject will be assessed on a graded basis by a research paper of 4,000 words including footnotes. Course Texts Prescribed
None
Recommended
None
Teaching materials may be provided by the Chinese professors teaching the subject in due course. Resources Refer to the course outline which will be provided by the lecturer at the beginning of the relevant semester.
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