Northwest University of Political Science and Law, Xi′an 710063, China
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History+
Published
05 Dec 2007
Issue Date
05 Dec 2007
Abstract
In traditional Chinese law, cases are the judicial decisions of general effects determined by special procedures. Before the Period of Spring and Autumn and Warring States, the main form of Chinese law was cases. After that period, Chinese legal system had gradually accommodated various forms in coexistence, with codes as the main body but cases as supplementary. Such a system maintained for a long time. Those cases in the codification era were based on codes and functioned to broaden the scope of legislation, supplement the legislative techniques and strengthen the effect of rules. As to the relationship between the establishment rule and the recurring rule of cases, ancient Chinese law persisted in the recurring rule and thus it maintained a relatively steady supply of rules while maintaining an inner stable legal forms.
WANG Shirong.
Functions of cases in traditional Chinese law. Front. Law China, 2007, 2(4): 493‒517 https://doi.org/10.1007/s11463-007-0023-z
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