The crisis of distribution is one of the longest standing and most complicated issues facing human society. Imbued with social, political, historic, and cultural elements, it varies significantly across different countries as a result of all these factors. As an emerging economy which transferred from a planned to a market economy, China has experienced large distribution gaps since it implemented the Reform and Opening-up Policy in the early 1980s, requiring stronger economic law to mitigate and regulate the crisis of distribution.
In this second volume, the author analyses crises of distribution from a theoretical perspective and proposes law and policy solutions. Believing that such crises are a collective result of systematic limitations, the author proposes a theoretical framework of “system–distribution–development” in order to resolve distribution problems and promote economic development. He argues that a crisis of distribution cannot be avoided without coordinated development of economic law and relevant constitutional, civil, and commercial law systems. In addition, it is necessary to differentiate the territories, industries, enterprises, and individuals that constitute such diverse systems.
The book should be of keen interest to researchers and students of law, economics, and political science.
By:
Shouwen Zhang Other:
Zhao Xin Imprint: Routledge Country of Publication: United Kingdom Dimensions:
Height: 234mm,
Width: 156mm,
Weight: 453g ISBN:9780367676704 ISBN 10: 0367676702 Series:China Perspectives Pages: 200 Publication Date:30 December 2020 Audience:
College/higher education
,
General/trade
,
Primary
,
ELT Advanced
Format:Hardback Publisher's Status: Active
1. Introduction. 2. The consistency of key distribution systems. 3. Unification and difference of distribution systems. 4. The legal protection of the distribution right and interest. 5. Legal response to distribution crisis. 6. Conclusion.
Shouwen Zhang is professor at Peking University Law School. His researh interests include Economic Law, Social Law, Information Law, etc.