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2 result(s) for "Hong Kong (China). Court of Final Appeal"
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Hong Kong's Court of Final Appeal
In the years since it was established on 1 July 1997, Hong Kong's Court of Final Appeal has developed a distinctive body of new law and doctrine with the help of eminent foreign common law judges. Under the leadership of Chief Justice Andrew Li, it has also remained independent under Chinese sovereignty and become a model for other Asian final courts working to maintain the rule of law, judicial independence and professionalism in challenging political environments. In this book, leading practitioners, jurists and academics examine the Court's history, operation and jurisprudence, and provide a comparative analysis with European courts and China's other autonomous final court in Macau. It also makes use of extensive empirical data compiled from the jurisprudence to illuminate the Court's decision-making processes and identify the relative impacts of the foreign and local judges.
The Disarticulation of Hong Kong's Post-Handover Political System
Examines relations between the executive and legislative branches and the bureaucracy; role of institutional arrangements in the Basic Law and domestic politics following the 1997 retrocession to Chinese sovereignty. The chief executive and the Executive Council (ExCo) Legislative Council (LegCo), the judiciary and rule of law, and erosion of bureaucratic dominance.