返回首页
 【公告】 1. 本网即日起只接受电子邮箱投稿,不便之处,请谅解! 2. 所有文章的评论功能暂时关闭,主要是不堪广告骚扰。需要讨论的,可到本网留言专区。 
学界动态
好汉反剽
社科论丛
校园文化
好汉教苑
好汉哲学
学习方法
心灵抚慰
好汉人生
好汉管理
学术服务
好汉网主
说好汉网
English
学术商城
学术交友
访客留言
世界天气
万年日历
学术吧台
各国会议
在线聊天
设为首页
加入收藏

首页  »  好汉网主

The Rule Of Law, The Chinese Communist Party, and Ideological Campaigns

作者  |  来源于  |  编辑于2010/11/23 14:49:48  |  浏览  次
分享到新浪微博+ 分享到QQ空间+ 分享到腾讯微博+ 分享到人人网+ 分享到开心网+ 分享到百度搜藏+ 分享到淘宝+ 分享到网易微博+ 分享到Facebook脸谱网+ 分享到Twitter推特网+ 用邮件推荐给朋友+ 打印

Downloaded from http://ssrn.com/abstract=929636.

China has sought to conform its institutions to the norms developed in the West. Thus, China has created State institutions as those organs of government where the will of the people as a whole can be represented.3 It has separated from these representative organs of state power the institutions of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).4 That separation confirms the Western intuition that the CCP should be no more than a political faction (like the American Republican Party or the U.K. Labour Party). At best, the CCP can represent the will, however powerful, of a single political party, albeit one with current constitutional status. As such, the CCP must give way to a superior institution, the state, through which the will of all of the political community can be most equitably expressed.

点击下载浏览该文件20101123144915772