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Mao And Mediation: Politics And Dispute Resolution in Communist China
This Book examines the resolution of disputes between individuals in China, relying on documentary sources and on interviews conducted by the author in Mandarin with fifty Chinese emigres in Hong Kong from 1965 through 1967. This Book has several primary goals. By closely analyzing Chinese institutions that have hitherto been inadequately described in the West, it seeks to show how the disagreements, fights, and quarrels of ordinary people in China are settled. Further, it attempts to define Chinese Communist concepts of the Chinese institutions which manages conflict and exercise control, and to explore the function of dispute resolution.
The Chinese Communist assert that mediation is far superior to adjudication,which they consider coercive. This preference for mediation was evident when the Communists first ruled large numbers of people in the "newly liberated areas" before establishing the Chinese People's Republic in 1949. Since 1949, the Chinese Communists have continued to extol mediation and claim to use it far more extensively than adjudication in settling disputes.
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