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Legal Education in China: More English Language Materials

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2019

Roderick O'Brien*
Affiliation:
University of South Australia

Extract

In 2010, the International Journal of Legal Information kindly published a list of English language materials on legal education in China. From the number of downloads and comments regarding that publication, it is clear that this list has been useful to scholars and students alike. In this issue, I have extended the list with more recent materials as well as a few older pieces which have come to my attention. I have not attempted to sort the available items on the basis of quality; sometimes a poorly written article or brief conference paper may yet be useful because it gives useful information about a local situation. All online addresses have been checked: some are still at the same address, some have moved, and (unfortunately) a number of items have been deleted from the 2010 list as they are no longer accessible. Of course, I would not claim to have found every article and every book chapter. No doubt there are more publications even as I write, while others have eluded my amateur search.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2015 by the International Association of Law Libraries. 

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References

1 Roderick O'Brien “Legal Education in China: English Language Materials” 38.1 International Journal of Legal Information 93–103 (2010).Google Scholar

2 Ministry of Justice: Law Popularization: Introduction. (2009) available at http://www.legalinfo.gov.cn/english/Law-Popularization/node_7616.htm (last visited February 28, 2015); Jennifer Altehenger: “Simplified Legal Knowledge in the Early PRC: Explaining and Publishing the Marriage Law” chapter 12 in Chen Li and Madeleine Zelin (eds): Chinese Law: Knowledge, Practice, and Transformation 1530s to 1950s, (2015), Brill, pages 342–366.Google Scholar

3 Teng, Biao: “What is a “Legal Education Centre” in China?” China Change (2014) available at http://chinachange.org/2014/04/03/what-is-a-legal-education-center-in-china/ (last visited February 28, 2015); Duihua Foundation: “Legal Education: Arbitrary Detention Doesn't end with RTL” available at http://www.duihuaresearch.org/2013/04/legal-education-arbitrary-detention.html (last visited March 1, 2015).Google Scholar