Search results for ""Author Bin Liang""
The University of Michigan Press Chinese Netizens Opinions on Death Sentences
Book SynopsisProvides the first in-depth examination of what Chinese netizens think about various death sentences and executions in China.
£27.50
LUP - University of Michigan Press Chinese Netizens Opinions on Death Sentences
Book SynopsisProvides the first in-depth examination of what Chinese netizens think about various death sentences and executions in China.
£61.70
Columbia University Press The Death Penalty in China
Book SynopsisExplains what it took to advance reforms to limit death sentences and executions in China while identifying the challenges that prevent more extensive progressTrade ReviewNo institution in the legal system of contemporary China has attracted more controversy and misunderstanding than the death penalty. Moreover, remarkable changes have significantly altered the way the death penalty is perceived and applied in the world's most populous state. The Death Penalty in China is required reading for anyone desiring to keep abreast of China's evolving legal landscape, criminal justice reform, and perplexing human rights environment. Highly recommended. -- Andrew Scobell, coauthor of China's Search for Security This excellent collection of essays should be greatly welcomed, providing as it does insights into the way that Chinese scholars, both within and outside China, as well as foreign scholars who have studied the Chinese system in depth, explain the changes underway and assess their significance. The Death Penalty in China needs to be read by everyone concerned with the project of eliminating capital punishment throughout the world. -- from the foreword by Roger Hood, emeritus professor of criminology, University of Oxford This outstanding book describes proficiently what is known and knowable about the death penalty in transition in China today. The cooperation between excellent Chinese scholars and world-renowned scholars from abroad secures relevance and accuracy. Debates and practices are captured in light of Chinese death penalty history, the special character of the Chinese state, as well as in comparison to other Chinas of the present. -- Lill Scherdin, project leader, Universities Against the Death Penalty A timely assessment of China's death penalty reform in context, this volume is a must read for academics and activists. Choice The Death Penalty in China is undoubtedly the most far-reaching, comprehensive, and current study of capital punishment by the world's largest executioner. -- Andrew Novak Asian CriminologyTable of ContentsForeword Preface and Acknowledgments 1. China's Death Penalty Practice: Working Progress, Struggle, and Challenges Within the Global Abolition Movement, by Bin Liang 2. The Criminal Justice System and the Death Penalty, by Hong Lu, Yudu Liu, and Charlotte Hu 3. Crimes of Counterrevolution and Politicized Use of the Death Penalty During the Mao Era, by Ning Zhang 4. China's Death Penalty in a State-Power-Based Society, by Yunhai Wang 5. From "Killing Many" to "Killing Fewer", by Susan Trevaskes 6. The Abolitionist and Retentionist Debate, by Zhigang Yu (translated by Charlotte Hu) 7. Guiding Cases for China's Death Penalty: Analysis and Reflection, by Xingliang Chen (translated by Charlotte Hu) 8. The Death Penalty After the Restoration of Centralized Review: An Empirical Study on Capital Sentencing, by Moulin Xiong 9. Public Opinion and the Death Penalty, by Shanhe Jiang 10. Between Deference and Defiance: Courts and Penal Populism in Chinese Capital Cases, by Hualing Fu 11. Chinese Capital Punishment in Comparative Perspective, by David T. Johnson and Michelle Miao 12. China's Death Penalty in the Twenty-First Century, by Bin Liang and Hong Lu List of Contributors Index
£80.00
Columbia University Press The Death Penalty in China
Book SynopsisExplains what it took to advance reforms to limit death sentences and executions in China while identifying the challenges that prevent more extensive progressTrade ReviewNo institution in the legal system of contemporary China has attracted more controversy and misunderstanding than the death penalty. Moreover, remarkable changes have significantly altered the way the death penalty is perceived and applied in the world's most populous state. The Death Penalty in China is required reading for anyone desiring to keep abreast of China's evolving legal landscape, criminal justice reform, and perplexing human rights environment. Highly recommended. -- Andrew Scobell, coauthor of China's Search for Security This excellent collection of essays should be greatly welcomed, providing as it does insights into the way that Chinese scholars, both within and outside China, as well as foreign scholars who have studied the Chinese system in depth, explain the changes underway and assess their significance. The Death Penalty in China needs to be read by everyone concerned with the project of eliminating capital punishment throughout the world. -- from the foreword by Roger Hood, emeritus professor of criminology, University of Oxford This outstanding book describes proficiently what is known and knowable about the death penalty in transition in China today. The cooperation between excellent Chinese scholars and world-renowned scholars from abroad secures relevance and accuracy. Debates and practices are captured in light of Chinese death penalty history, the special character of the Chinese state, as well as in comparison to other Chinas of the present. -- Lill Scherdin, project leader, Universities Against the Death Penalty A timely assessment of China's death penalty reform in context, this volume is a must read for academics and activists. ChoiceTable of ContentsForeword Preface and Acknowledgments 1. China's Death Penalty Practice: Working Progress, Struggle, and Challenges Within the Global Abolition Movement, by Bin Liang 2. The Criminal Justice System and the Death Penalty, by Hong Lu, Yudu Liu, and Charlotte Hu 3. Crimes of Counterrevolution and Politicized Use of the Death Penalty During the Mao Era, by Ning Zhang 4. China's Death Penalty in a State-Power-Based Society, by Yunhai Wang 5. From "Killing Many" to "Killing Fewer", by Susan Trevaskes 6. The Abolitionist and Retentionist Debate, by Zhigang Yu (translated by Charlotte Hu) 7. Guiding Cases for China's Death Penalty: Analysis and Reflection, by Xingliang Chen (translated by Charlotte Hu) 8. The Death Penalty After the Restoration of Centralized Review: An Empirical Study on Capital Sentencing, by Moulin Xiong 9. Public Opinion and the Death Penalty, by Shanhe Jiang 10. Between Deference and Defiance: Courts and Penal Populism in Chinese Capital Cases, by Hualing Fu 11. Chinese Capital Punishment in Comparative Perspective, by David T. Johnson and Michelle Miao 12. China's Death Penalty in the Twenty-First Century, by Bin Liang and Hong Lu List of Contributors Index
£25.50