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Private Law in China and Taiwan: Legal and Economic Analyses

Private Law in China and Taiwan: Legal and Economic Analyses

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Yun-chien Chang
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Reprint, 8/16/2018
EAN 9781108466813, ISBN10: 1108466818

Paperback, 360 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.1 cm
Language: English

Past research and literature suggest that legal institutions drive economic development. Yet China has grown for decades without the fundamental legal infrastructure that was once considered necessary. This is called the 'China puzzle' or the 'China myth'. By carefully comparing the four key branches of private law in China and Taiwan - a jurisdiction that grew with modest legal institutions and shares similar legal and non-legal culture - this collaborative and novel book demystifies the 'China puzzle'. Top scholars in the field use an economics-focused analytical approach to explain how and why the laws have taken such paths over the past four decades. Comparing property, contract, tort, and corporate laws in China and Taiwan, these authors delve deeply into key doctrines to provide a meaningful account of the evolution of private law in these two jurisdictions.

Introduction Yun-chien Chang
Part I. Foundation
1. Concentrated and distributed law
observations on legal evolution from China and Taiwan Saul Levmore
2. Economic of harmonization and legal convergence Bruno Deffains
Part II. Application
3. The evolution of contract law in China
convergence in law but divergence in enforcement? Jing Leng and Wei Shen
4. The evolution of contract law in Taiwan
lost in transaction? Wen-Yeu Wang
5. The evolution of the law of torts in China
the growth of a liability system Wei Zhang
6. The evolution of the law of torts in Taiwan
a doctrinal-economic interpretation Tze-Shiou Chien
7. The evolution of property law in China
stick by stick Shitong Qiao
8. The evolution of property law in Taiwan
an unconventional interest group story Yun-chien Chang
9. The evolution of company law in China
mission possible to reform SOEs? Ruoying Chen
10. The evolution of company law in Taiwan
a focus on the blockholder-centric model Ching-Ping Shao.