Holding Sway
Jerome A. Cohen says the Communist Party's sustained efforts since June 4 to influence China's courts for its own ends may be easing, but judicial independence is still a long way off.
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Adjunct Senior Fellow for Asia Studies
Legal and business transactions in Asia; international relations of East Asia; international law.
Jerome A. Cohen says the Communist Party's sustained efforts since June 4 to influence China's courts for its own ends may be easing, but judicial independence is still a long way off.
See more in China, International Law
Jerome A. Cohen says, "Beijing's pending prosecution of deposed Politburo member Bo Xilai and the recent murder conviction of his wife, Gu Kailai , have again brought China's criminal justice system to world attention."
See more in China, Rule of Law
With the passing of International Human Rights Day, Jerome A. Cohen says China still has no effective means of enforcing the rights enshrined in its constitution. Yet, once again, new Communist Party leaders reignite hopes for bringing government and the party under the rule of law.
See more in China, Human Rights, International Law
Jerome A. Cohen says that while Bo Xilai and Chen Kegui "hail from opposite ends of China's political, economic and social hierarchies, they now have much in common, including the determination of the authorities to punish them for political reasons."
See more in China, Human Rights, Rule of Law
Jerome A. Cohen discusses Ted Kennedy's influence on the formation of U.S. policy toward China.
See more in China, Foreign Policy History
Jerome A. Cohen and Eva Pils use the case of Hu Jia, 34—a Chinese commentator and activist convicted of undermining the State’s power—to highlight the serious flaws of the Chinese legal system.
See more in China, Democracy and Human Rights
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Despite urging from President Obama and rising discontent at home, President Hu is only nodding to human rights, says CFR's Jerome A. Cohen, but if China's domestic pressure becomes strong enough, perhaps Hu's successor will change course.
See more in China, Democracy and Human Rights
Jerome A. Cohen, an expert on human rights in China, sees "enormous progress" in economic and social rights but says deep problems--and sometimes harsh reprisals--persist for those seeking political and civil rights.
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China's legal system is developing, but meaningful reform of its authoritarian political system has not yet taken place. What role are law and legal institutions likely to play in China's political reform process? This hearing assessed the state of China's rule of law development and examined the role of legal institutions in political transitions in Taiwan and South Korea to see whether these experiences suggest a path ahead for China.
See more in China, Democracy Promotion, International Law
Jerome A. Cohen and Yu-Jie Chen explore Taiwan's progress in protecting people's rights.
See more in Taiwan, Human Rights, Labor
Jerome A. Cohen argues that whatever form the proposed end of re-education through labour takes, even if it fails to fully comply with China's constitution or its laws, the present situation is likely to be improved.
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Jerome A. Cohen and Yu-Jie Chen argue that legal safeguards remain inadequate for Taiwanese suspected of a crime on the mainland despite hopes of reform to allow greater security for detainees
See more in China, Taiwan, Rule of Law
Jerome A. Cohen says China's unfair criminal justice system makes a harsh sentence all but certain for Gu Kailai, the wife of Bo Xilai who is charged with murdering a British businessman.
See more in China, Human Rights, Rule of Law
Jerome A. Cohen argues that by systematically undermining an accused person's right to effective counsel, as and when it is deemed necessary, China is only harming its own efforts to win foreign admirers.
See more in China, Democracy and Human Rights
Jerome A. Cohen asks, "As China's Communist Party elite prepare to select the country's leadership for the coming decade, to what extent does concern for the rule of law affect their deliberations?"
See more in China, Elections, Rule of Law
Jerome A. Cohen discusses conspiracy speculations surrounding the Chen Guangcheng case.
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Jerome A. Cohen says diplomacy took Chen Guangcheng only so far.
See more in United States, China, Human Rights, Rule of Law
Jerome A. Cohen looks at various types of incommunicado detention in China, and discusses what Bo Xilai could face under "shuanggui," a widely feared internal disciplinary action that is outside the reach of Chinese law.
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Jerome A. Cohen discusses Bo Xilai, criminal justice, and China's leadership.
See more in China, Rule of Law, Political Movements
New York, New York
CFR Adjunct Senior Fellow for Asia Studies and Codirector of New York University School of Law's U.S.-Asia Law Institute
| May Yang |
For more information on the David Rockefeller Studies Program, contact:
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Director, Studies Administration
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