In The Constitutional Identity of Contemporary China: The Unitary System and Its Internal Logic, Han Zhai offers a profound understanding of Chinaâs constitutional history with her account of constitutional identity of multi-layered states in other parts of the world. This book successfully bridges Chinaâs constitutional complex and the emerging common theory of constitutional law with methodological innovations. In constitutional comparison, this workâs treatment of the Kingdoms of Spain and the Netherlands provides effective structural and historical analysis. This book does not only awaken Chinaâs constitutional identity in contemporary scholarship but also presents rich possibilities in the constitutional study and the way we understand a countryâs fundamental arrangements in its national context
Han Zhai, Ph.D. (2017), Tilburg University, is lecturer of constitutional law and associate research fellow at Wuhan University, China. She holds an LL.M. of the Chinese University of Political Science and Law and an LL.B. of Inner Mongolia University. She is also research fellow at the Israel Institute for Advanced Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, in the 2019â2020 Research Group 'Constitutional Transplantation.
Foreword Preface List of Figures and Tables Abbreviations
1 Introduction
â1.1âWhy China and Its 1982 Constitution?
â1.2âThe Rise of Constitutional Identity: Definition with Interpretation
â1.3âPresuppositions, Research Questions and Methodological Approaches
â1.4âThe Plan of This Book
2 Modern Constitutionalism in China and the Fundamental Structure
â2.1âModern Chinaâs Efforts towards Constitutionalism
â2.2âConstitutions of the PRC
â2.3âNew Characteristics in the 1982 Constitution
â2.4âConcluding Remarks
3 Regional Autonomies under the Unitary System
â3.1âRegional Autonomy in the Unitary System
â3.2âThe Hong Kong SARâs Autonomy under Chinaâs Unitary System
â3.3âMainland Chinaâs National Reunification with Taiwan
â3.4âFormal and Informal Constitutional Changes in Taiwan since the 1990s
â3.5âConcluding Remarks
4 Reformative Decentralisation and Unsettled Constitutional Centralisation
â4.1âIntroduction
â4.2âEstablishing the SEZs
â4.3âDynamic Fiscal Decentralisation before 1994
â4.4âThe 1994 Tax Reform and Its Evolution
â4.5âCentralising the Decentralisation
â4.6âConcluding Remarks
5 Constitutional Arrangements and Disharmonies in Comparison
â5.1âIntroduction
â5.2âTemporary Fundamental Designs in the Changing Tides
â5.3âRegional Autonomous Arrangements within the 1978 Constitution
â5.4âConcluding Remarks
6 Parties and Constitutionalism
â6.1âIntroduction
â6.2âTheoretical Analysis of Political Representation
â6.3ââReforming Originalismâ in the Wider Context
â6.4âConstitutional Constraints on Political Parties
â6.5âConcluding Remarks
7 Two Learned Principles
â7.1âIntroduction
â7.2âDemocratic Centralism
â7.3âThe United Front
â7.4âConcluding Remarks
8 Conclusions
â8.1âConstitutional Identity of Contemporary China: A System to Unify
â8.2âThe Unitary System and Its Invisible Parts: Understanding the Logic
â8.3âThe âReformingâ Constitutions, Disharmonies and Vulnerable Identities
â8.4âEvaluating the Unitary System
â8.5âThoughts on the Way Forward
Postscript Notes: On the Ongoing and Unprecedented Recentralisation
Appendix 1 Appendix 2
Selected Bibliography Index
All interested in comparative constitutional law, and whoever is interested in the constitutional backbone of China with a rapidly growing influential role in international relations