Charting China’s Legal Reforms: Outcomes Since the 2014 ‘Rule of Law’ Plenum
Charting China’s Legal Reforms: Outcomes Since the 2014 ‘Rule of Law’ Plenum
Friday, May 10, 202412:00 PM - 1:30 PM (Pacific)
Encina Hall, Third Floor, Central, C330
616 Jane Stanford Way, Stanford, CA 94305
Amidst the aftermath of a profoundly disruptive pandemic and a transformed geopolitical landscape, what progress has been made regarding the legal developments announced at China’s "Rule of Law Plenum" in 2014? Join the China Program at APARC for a presentation by Neysun Mahboubi, informed by extensive fieldwork, on judicial and administrative law developments in the decade since the Fourth Plenum of the 18th Party Congress and its promise to “comprehensively advance the rule of law.”
Neysun Mahboubi is the Director of the Penn Project on the Future of U.S.-China Relations at the University of Pennsylvania, where he teaches various courses related to Chinese history, law, and policy. Previously he was a Research Scholar of Penn’s Center for the Study of Contemporary China ("CSCC"), and he continues to host the CSCC Podcast. His current writing focuses on the development of modern Chinese administrative law.