To participate in the global economy authoritarian states are pressed to offer international business a legal order that protects the interests of investors, customers, and sellers, but the creation of a modern legal order threatens to undermine the leaders’ control of public life. An increasingly common way to resolve this dilemma, I argue, is developing formal legal institutions that appear to meet world standards, while using informal practices to maintain control over the administration of justice when needed. In this paper I show how the governments of post-Soviet Russia (with its hybrid or competitive authoritarian regime) and the fully authoritarian People’s Republic of China as well, have used this approach in their relations with judges and defense lawyers in their respective countries. The analysis underscores the utility of investigating informal practices along with the reform of formal legal institutions, especially in the context of transition.
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December 2010
Research Article|
November 02 2010
Authoritarian legality and informal practices: Judges, lawyers and the state in Russia and China
Peter H. Solomon, Jr.
Peter H. Solomon, Jr.
Munk School of Global Affairs, University of Toronto, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 3K7
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Communist and Post-Communist Studies (2010) 43 (4): 351–362.
Citation
Peter H. Solomon; Authoritarian legality and informal practices: Judges, lawyers and the state in Russia and China. Communist and Post-Communist Studies 1 December 2010; 43 (4): 351–362. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.postcomstud.2010.10.006
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