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Administrative law in the People's Republic of China was virtually non-existent before the economic reform era. Since the 1980s, The People's Republic of China has constructed a new legal framework for administrative law , establishing control mechanisms for overseeing the bureaucracy and disciplinary committees for the Chinese Communist Party .
Social issues in China are wide-ranging, and are a combined result of Chinese economic reforms set in place in the late 1970s, the nation's political and cultural history, and an immense population. Due to the significant number of social problems that have existed throughout the country, China's government has faced difficulty in trying to ...
China's first comprehensive antitrust law was the Anti-Monopoly Law which was passed in 2007 and became effective in 2008. [11]: 89 In 2015, the Administrative Procedure Law was revised. [33]: 136 The 2015 revisions expand the people's rights to sue the government. [33]: 136
The Administrative Procedure Law is thought to be an important achievement in enforcing the Chinese Constitution and its socialist legal system. [4] Also according to economist Keyu Jin, the revisions to the Administrative Procedure Law codified in 2021 marked a new milestone in improving the rule of law in China. [3]: 281
The Confucian notion that morality and self-discipline was more important than legal codes caused many historians, such as Max Weber, until the mid-20th century to conclude that law was not an important part of Imperial Chinese society. This notion, however, has come under extreme criticism and is no longer the conventional wisdom among ...
Numerous human rights groups have publicized human rights issues in mainland China that they consider the government to be mishandling, including: the death penalty (capital punishment), the one-child policy (in which China had made exceptions for ethnic minorities prior to abolishing it in 2015), the political and legal status of Tibet, and ...
Loyalty and filial piety come first. Then we have love, faithfulness, and love of peace. Some who crave the new form of civilization want to throw away these virtues. They say that these old relics have no place in modern civilization. They are wrong, however; because China can ill afford to lose these previous virtues." [8]
The definition of civil servant (Chinese: 公务员; pinyin: gōngwùyuán), a term formally codified in the 2006 Civil Service Law is often ambiguous in China. [3] Most broadly, civil servants in China are a subset of CCP cadres , the class of professional staff who administer and manage Chinese government, party, military, and major business ...