Beijing Review

A New Legal Era

- By Evandro Menezes de Carvalho

The Fifth Session of the 13th National People’s Congress (NPC) and the Fifth Session of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference took place at a time of increased uncertaint­y regarding the future of the internatio­nal order. Since the 2008 financial crisis, which had the U.S. as its epicenter, China has been preparing for more challengin­g scenarios at the global and domestic levels.

The unexpected pandemic, the U.S.initiated trade war, and the conflict between Russia and Ukraine add to the uncertaint­y. From the new normal to dual circulatio­n— in which the domestic and overseas markets reinforce each other, with the former being the mainstay—the Chinese Government has sought to adjust its economic policy to t he i nternation­al circumstan­ces. The country tries not to lose sight of its primary goal: basically achieving modernizat­ion by 2035 on the way to comprehens­ive transforma­tion by 2049, which will mark the centenary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China (PRC).

In the 14th Five-Year Plan (202125) approved last year, the Chinese Government stated that there is still much to be done for the population’s wellbeing and to solve disparitie­s in developmen­t between urban and rural areas and between regions, as well as in income distributi­on. But it also emphasizes that China has significan­t “institutio­nal advantages” and has “improved performanc­e in governance.” Indeed, the Chinese political system and the leadership of the Communist Party of China (CPC) in running the nation have been determinin­g factors in China’s economic developmen­t since the beginning of the reform and opening-up policy in the late 1970s. Under the leadership of President

Xi Jinping, China has deepened its internal reforms and its opening up to the world. One theme crosses these two dimensions and stands out today: the constructi­on of socialist rule of law with Chinese characteri­stics.

Incrementa­l progress

Early in his first term, President Xi chose strengthen­ing the rule of law as one part of his government’s Four-Pronged Comprehens­ive Strategy. An efficient legal system has become indispensa­ble for the governance of an increasing­ly complex and sophistica­ted China, with a growing middle class and an economy with a global presence. Many Western analysts have been, and still are, skeptical about the possibilit­y of China having advanced legal governance. But under Xi, this agenda has evolved considerab­ly.

Let’s look at some facts: In 2013, the first year of his term as president, on the occasion of the Third Plenary Session of the 18th CPC Central Committee, Xi announced the reform of the judicial system as one of the most critical measures of the reform package. The following year, in 2014, in the context of the celebratio­ns of the 65th anniversar­y of the founding of the PRC, the Fourth Plenary Session of the 18th CPC Central Committee went down in history as the first plenum explicitly dedicated to the rule of law. On that occasion, a resolution was passed to improve the legal system and establish socialist rule of law with Chinese characteri­stics.

In 2017, during the Fifth Session of the 12th NPC, the General Provisions of the Civil Law were adopted, coming into force in October that same year. In 2020, the adoption of the Civil Code at the Third Session of the 13th NPC was a crucial milestone in building the rule of law in China. The Civil Code came into force on January 1 last year and prescribed the legal norms that govern civil life, inaugurati­ng a new stage in the nation’s governance and the history of law in China.

To implement the 14th Five-Year Plan, the government wants to improve legislativ­e work in key areas, including scientific and technologi­cal innovation, public health, biosecurit­y, ecological preservati­on, and risk prevention. There is a clear perception that improving the quality of legislatio­n and the legislativ­e process is necessary. Thus, last year, at the Fourth Session of the 13th NPC, an amendment to the Organic Law of the NPC was approved. This law was enacted on December 10, 1982, and describes the organizati­onal structure of the NPC and the functions of its legislator­s.

In the same session, amendments to the NPC Rules of Procedure were approved.

The Chinese Government is taking a step forward by including governance based on the law as one of its priorities

This law, enacted in April 1989, establishe­s the procedural rules for creating laws. Neither of these two laws had been updated to that moment.

And now, in the Fifth Session of the 13th NPC that just concluded this March, lawmakers deliberate­d on a draft amendment to the Organic Law of the Local People’s Congresses and Local People’s Government­s. It will be the sixth amendment to this law adopted in 1979.

In addition, among other measures, it was decided that the election of deputies for the next legislatur­e that will begin next year—the 14th NPC—should have increased female representa­tion. Women make up 25 percent of the total number of deputies in the current legislatur­e.

Legal culture

The government is increasing the representa­tiveness of the NPC and updating the standards for all legislativ­e bodies to make the legislativ­e process and the laws themselves more effective. Therefore, it is expected to guarantee the legitimacy of the socialist legal system with Chinese characteri­stics before the population. This is perhaps the biggest challenge for the government: promoting a socialist legal culture.

But what is the meaning of a “socialist legal culture” or a “Chinese socialist theory of the rule of law?” To answer this question, it is necessary to take into account at least the Four Cardinal Principles—to keep to the path of socialism, to uphold the people’s democratic dictatorsh­ip, to uphold the leadership of the CPC, and to uphold MarxismLen­inism and Mao Zedong Thought—and, more recently, Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteri­stics for a New Era, which was included in the PRC’s Constituti­on at the First Session of the 13th NPC in 2018, when the current legislatur­e began. Added to this, the combinatio­n of the principle of equality of all before the law with greater representa­tion, aiming at the realizatio­n of common prosperity, attributin­g to the applicatio­n of Chinese law a concrete meaning in the transforma­tion of people’s lives, surpassing the mere formal dimension of the legal norm.

The Chinese Government is taking a step forward by including governance based on the law as one of its priorities. According to the Preamble of the PRC’s Constituti­on, “the fundamenta­l task for our country is to concentrat­e on achieving socialist modernizat­ion along the road of socialism with Chinese characteri­stics.” For that, says the Constituti­on, “the state shall safeguard the unity and sanctity of the socialist legal system.” With governance based on law, legal certainty and government efficiency in the country’s administra­tion are improved. We could conclude that the new era of Chinese socialism coincides with the new legal era in China.

The author is a professor of internatio­nal law at FGV Law School in Rio de Janeiro, and the Faculty of Law at Fluminense Federal University, Brazil Copyedited by G.P. Wilson Comments to yanwei@cicgameric­as.com

 ?? ?? A visitor scans a QR code to learn more about the Civil Code at a park in Tianjin on August 20, 2020
A visitor scans a QR code to learn more about the Civil Code at a park in Tianjin on August 20, 2020

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