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E-raamat: Civil Judgments at First Instance: Comparative Experience and Chinese Solution

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This book provides an in-depth discussion and introduction to Chinese civil procedure from both a theoretical and practical perspectives, as well as a comparative study of its relevant systems with those of the West. 





The subject matter of this book is Chinese civil judgments. Judgments, as the final judicial product which affects the legal relationship between both parties or even multiple parties, provide a desirable objects to observe and evaluate the service of judicial proceedings and the protection of the parties procedural rights. And since judgments are in most cases regarded as the default termination of any civil litigation, there is no need to argue for a comparative study on this topic which has already inspired Chinese doctrines and newest reforms. One of the aims of such research is to modernize Chinese civil justice considering the experience of leading legal counterparts.





Next to the theoretical analysis, this book introduces empirical data in China to the English literature, which could provide a vivid illustration for legal researchers to be better informed about the Chinese legal system and its real version of rule of law. In other words, this book likes to describe the real judicial practice in China and summarize how Chinese lawyers understand and facilitate the production of civil judgments.





Moreover, this book intends to focus on the adjudicative techniques in the civil litigation, which should constitute the mutual basis of most civil justice. Even there is no well-developed theory under the name of Adjudicate Techniques in some jurisdictions, it is not uncommon to discover some principles, methods, institutions, and practical operation, which is functionally and substantially comparable to the ones in other civil justice systems. 
Introduction.- Examples of Civil Judgments as the Start point.- Civil
Judgments in China: Structure, Reasoning and Reform.- Application of Law:
Substantive Legal Grounds, Citations of Legal Sources, and Methodological
Issues.- Finding of Facts: Decisive Documentary Evidence in Civil Litigation
and Its Proving Effects.- Burden of Proof: Chinese Approach to Resolving the
Factual Issue of Non-Liquet.- Effects of Final Judgments (I): Predetermined
Effects of Their Factual Conviction.- Effects of Final Judgments (II): Scope
of Res Judicata Effect and Possible Issue Preclusion?.- Correction of Errors:
Redressing Obvious Errors and Omitted Claims in First Instance.- Context of
Civil Judgments: Judicial System and Procedural Arrangement.- Challenges of
Online Dispute Resolution: New Possibilities and Boundaries.-
Conclusion.- Appendix. Related Translation of Essential Chinese Legal
Documents.
Zhixun CAO (Hector) is a professor (Research) in Peking University (China). He holds his LL.B., LL.M., and LL.D. in Peking University and is pursuing his second doctoral title in University of Regensburg (Germany). He was a postdoctoral research fellow at Shanghai Jiaotong University (China). His research interests cover civil procedure, evidence law, dispute resolution, civil and commercial law, comparative law, and judicial system. He is the author of more than 90 scientific publications in books and journals and was invited as a speaker or a national reporter in conferences in over ten jurisdictions. Dr. Cao was the chief researcher of a project granted by the National Social Science Foundation in China between 2018 and 2024. In 2020, the Department of Education in China awarded him the Higher School Science Research Excellent Achievement Prize (humanities and social science). He is a director of the China Civil Procedural Law Society and the deputy secretary general of the Center for International Arbitration Research of Peking University. He is an active editor of the Peking University Law Journal in Chinese.