Law-making functions of the Chinese courts: Judicial activism in a country of rapid social changes
WANG Chenguang
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Law School of Tshinghua University, Beijing 100084, China
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Published
05 Dec 2006
Issue Date
05 Dec 2006
Abstract
The judicial production of law and the legislative production of law make a striking distinction between the two legal traditions. Despite of these differences, judges in both legal traditions in adjudicating cases have a common task, which is the application of legal rules to the facts of cases pending for judgments. The tension between the certainty and the discretion is universal for any legal system and, to a certain extent, it poses a hard dilemma for the rhetoric of rule of law. In the transitional countries such as China where rapid social changes and transformations take place, the judiciary and judges can not escape from taking more active roles in interpreting or even law making process. It arouses much controversy, particularly in continental legal traditions, for the judiciary is deemed to perform a mechanical role in adjudicating cases. This article intends to analyze the needs for judicial law-making function in China and its reasons. It reveals that judicial interpretation constitutes an important source of law despite its ambiguous legislative position. The article argues that judicial activism is inevitable against the transitional nature of current Chinese society.
WANG Chenguang.
Law-making functions of the Chinese courts: Judicial activism in a country of rapid social changes. Front. Law China, 2006, 1(4): 524‒549 https://doi.org/10.1007/s11463-006-0025-2
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