Strike Hard!: Anti-crime Campaigns and Chinese Criminal Justice, 1979-1985

Front Cover
East Asia Program, Cornell University, 1999 - History - 253 pages
As it set forth to achieve rapid modernizing economic growth under the leadership of Deng Xiaoping, the People's Republic simultaneously undertook to reform China's criminal justice system in order to make it more efficient, more accountable to central authority, and better suited to the task of maintaining public order in a changing economic and social environment. Taking a historical approach, this book draws on a wide variety of openly and internally published laws, legal interpretations, talks, speeches, Communist Party documents, collections of criminal cases and other sources ranging from the 1950s to the 1990s in order to portray the development of the Chinese criminal justice system between 1979 and 1985 and to place these changes in the context of the reform agenda of Deng's China. Particular attention is paid to the practice of criminal justice and the reform of prisoners, to the role of campaigns in the development of the Chinese criminal justice system, and to the relationship between crime trends, criminal justice, and modernization. This work should be of interest to students of comparative law and criminal justice, as well as to specialists in Chinese law, politics, and the history of the People's Republic. Book jacket.

From inside the book

Contents

The Laws
5
The Organs of Dictatorship
31
Strike Hard The Anticrime Campaign of 198385
83
Copyright

5 other sections not shown

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1999)

Harold Tanner is Chair and Associate Professor of History at the University of North Texas.

Bibliographic information