Srl | Item |
1 |
ID:
085906
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Publication |
2008.
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Summary/Abstract |
This paper focuses on the private property and its limits in urban China.It explores the emergence of urban property markets; urban property-holding in relation to the complexity of urban governance; "minor property rights apartments" that form a de facto real estate market and cross over the urban-rural divide; the "grey areas" of blurring legal and administrative boundaries in modern China; and recent change to the rural land system and the rural-urban divide. The conclusion flags the theme of the city as laboratory with regard to the blurring legal and governmental urban-rural distinction.
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2 |
ID:
173853
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Summary/Abstract |
A seismic change in the residential pattern is emerging in rural China today: traditional rural houses have been rapidly erased from the face of the countryside with large numbers of peasants being relocated to modern high-rise buildings. This process of “peasant elevation” has had a monumental impact on rural China. It redefines the entitlement to land use by the rural citizenry and negotiations for a new regime of property rights concerning land administration, while, most importantly, it undermines the position of the local state in rural China, whose authority is an aggregation of three distinctive elements: coercive power inherent in the state apparatus, control over economic resources, and resonance with local morality. Based on original data collected in Chongqing, Nantong and Dezhou, this paper argues that the comprehensive uprooting of the Chinese peasantry from the land and the resulting complications have caused moral disorientation among the relocated peasants and fragmentation of local authority. The difficulty in establishing community identity in the new setting has further undermined local governance. This may in turn trigger a wave of social and political tensions that may eventually turn out to be a major political challenge to the regime for years to come.
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3 |
ID:
129303
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Publication |
2012.
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Summary/Abstract |
After the first draft of the PRC's "Law of the Application of Law for Foreign-Related Civil Relations" was drawn up in February 2002, it took eight years for the Law to finally be adopted by the Seventeenth Session of the Standing Committee of the Eleventh National People's Congress on October 28, 2010, during which time seven drafts of the Law were produced. Summing up China's legislative experience and practices over so many years and taking account of advanced international Rights (property rights), the protection of the rights and interests of the weak is valued, etc. When we compare the seven drafts of the Law, the legislative evolution of the Law from state-oriented to internationally oriented can be clearly delineated.
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4 |
ID:
098219
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5 |
ID:
108023
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