Rural land takings law in modern China : origin and evolution / Chun Peng, Peking University.
2018
KNQ2820 .P46 2018 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
Rural land takings law in modern China : origin and evolution / Chun Peng, Peking University.
Published
Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2018.
Copyright
©2018
Call Number
KNQ2820 .P46 2018
Former Call Number
Ch.P 446 P376 2018
ISBN
9781107190931 hardcover
1107190932 hardcover
1107190932 hardcover
Description
xv, 336 pages ; 24 cm
System Control No.
(OCoLC)1007500950
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
List of Figures
x
List of Tables
xi
Acknowledgments
xii
List of Abbreviations
xv
1.
Introduction
1
1.1.
Defining Land Taking in China
3
1.2.
Massive Rural Land Expropriation in Contemporary China
6
1.3.
Making Sense of China's Rural Land Expropriation Law
11
1.4.
Transition Paradigm
14
1.5.
Theme, Thesis and Structure of the Book
24
2.
Broken Constitutional Promise: Diagnoses and Prescriptions
29
2.1.
Public Interest Prerequisite: Triple Challenge
29
2.2.
Expropriation Compensation: Unjust and Unfair
36
2.3.
Prescriptions: Toward the Chinese Fifth Amendment
46
3.
Limited Reform: Symptoms and Causes
57
3.1.
Reform and Its Limitations
58
3.2.
Land Finance as the Explanation
74
4.
Original Constitutional Takings Clause: Origin, Meaning and Purpose
86
4.1.
Origin of Original Constitutional Takings Clause
87
4.2.
Parsing the Original Constitutional Takings Clause
92
4.3.
Purpose of Original Constitutional Takings Clause
106
4.4.
Transition Paradigm Reconsidered
108
5.
Theoretical Foundations of Land Takings Power: Competing Traditions and Common Legacy
112
5.1.
Land Nationalization: A Tale of Two Traditions
113
5.2.
Land Expropriation: From Classical Liberalism to Socialized Property
140
5.3.
Common Legacy of Competing Theories
154
6.
1982 Constitutional Takings Clause Re-examined: New Wine in an Old Bottle
159
6.1.
"Urban Land Is Owned by the State": A Reinterpretation
160
6.2.
Forbidding Voluntary Land Transaction
192
6.3.
Rational Use of Land
203
6.4.
Parsing the 1982 Takings Clause: Nature and Purpose
207
7.
Rural Land Expropriation Law in the Reform Era: A Story of Continuity
212
7.1.
Structural Continuity
214
7.2.
Functional Continuity
223
7.3.
Normative Continuity
236
7.4.
Foundational Continuity
239
7.5.
Persistent Non-justiciability of Expropriation Decisions
253
8.
Conclusion
266
8.1.
Taking Stock
266
8.2.
Doing Away with the Transition Paradigm
269
8.3.
Making Sense of the Rise of the Transition Paradigm
274
8.4.
Immanent Critique
285
8.5.
Looking Ahead
315
Appendix 1
319
Appendix 2
328
Index
331