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East Asian Socialism and East Asian Legality: A Response to Ewan Smith

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 November 2019

FU Hualing
Affiliation:
Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong, Hong [email protected]
John GILLESPIE
Affiliation:
Department of Business Law and Taxation, Monash University, [email protected]
Pip NICHOLSON
Affiliation:
Faculty of Law, University of Melbourne, [email protected]
William PARTLETT
Affiliation:
Faculty of Law, University of Melbourne, [email protected]

Abstract

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Type
Reply
Copyright
Copyright © National University of Singapore, 2019

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Footnotes

*

Professor of Law, University of Hong Kong.

Professor of Law, Monash University.

Dean, Melbourne Law School and Professor of Law, University of Melbourne.

§

Associate Professor, University of Melbourne.

References

1. See Ginsburgs, George, ‘The Soviet Procuracy and Forty Years of Socialist Legality’ (1959) 18 American Slavic and East European Review 34, 34CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Mańko, Rafal, ‘Is the Socialist Legal Tradition “Dead and Buried”? The Continuity of Certain Elements of Socialist Legal Culture in Polish Civil Procedure’ in Wilhelmsson, Thomas, Paunio, Elina & Pohjolainen, Annika (eds), Private Law and the Many Cultures of Europe (Kluwer Law International 2007) 9498Google Scholar.

2. See Cooney, Sean, Biddulph, Sarah & Zhu, Ying, Law and Fair Work in China (Routledge 2013)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hualing, Fu & Xiaobo, Zhai, ‘What Makes the Chinese Constitution Socialist?’ (2018) 16 International Journal of Constitutional Law 655CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

3. See eg Chen, Jidong, Pan, Jennifer & Xu, Yiqing, ‘Sources of Authoritarian Responsiveness: A Field Experiment in China’ (2016) 60 American Journal of Political Science 383CrossRefGoogle Scholar.