Cambridge Catalogue  
  • Your account
  • View basket
  • Help
Home > Catalogue > Environmental Litigation in China
Environmental Litigation in China

Details

  • 1 b/w illus. 6 tables
  • Page extent: 310 pages
  • Size: 228 x 152 mm
  • Weight: 0.52 kg
Add to basket

Hardback

 (ISBN-13: 9781107020023)

Available, despatch within 3-4 weeks

US $99.00
Singapore price US $105.93 (inclusive of GST)

This is a book about the improbable: seeking legal relief for pollution in contemporary China. In a country known for tight political control and ineffectual courts, Environmental Litigation in China unravels how everyday justice works: how judges make decisions, why lawyers take cases, and how international influence matters. It is a readable account of how the leadership's mixed signals and political ambivalence play out on the ground – propelling some, such as the village doctor who fought a chemical plant for more than a decade, even as others back away from risk. Yet this remarkable book shows that even in a country where expectations would be that law wouldn't much matter, environmental litigation provides a sliver of space for legal professionals to explore new roles and, in so doing, probe the boundary of what is politically possible.

• Draws on sixteen months of field research, including four case studies and over 160 interviews • Highly interdisciplinary, drawing on relevant literature from across the social sciences (political science, sociology, law, anthropology) • Avoids jargon and is accessible to a wide audience

Contents

1. Post-Mao: economic growth, environmental protection, and the law; 2. From dispute to decision; 3. Frontiers of environmental law; 4. Political ambivalence: the state; 5. On the front lines: the judges; 6. Heroes or troublemakers? The lawyers; 7. Soft support: the international NGOs; 8. Thinking about outcomes.

printer iconPrinter friendly version AddThis