解读中国法治背后的逻辑:特约编辑简介

Guo Xing-hua
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摘要

本期四篇文章都探讨了中国社会法治背后的特殊逻辑。四位作者分别从中国民众的法律意识、中国基层法院法律实践背后的逻辑、中国共产党开创的独特的马希武审判模式、中国“合法性”观念的演变、中国公民社会独特的发展路径等不同角度对这一问题进行了探讨。作为一种社会治理方式,法治与人治形成鲜明对比。法治是有实践基础的,不是空洞无物的制度。因此,仅仅研究法律条文并不能使我们全面准确地了解一个国家的法律状况。有必要探讨这些法律规定如何在日常生活中付诸实施。仅仅研究法律条文的内在逻辑,并不能使我们理解一个国家法律制度中的各种悖论。有必要在适用法律的社会环境中确定这些矛盾。仅仅通过移植发达国家的法律制度来促进国内的法治进程是不够的。相反,必须努力寻找适合有关国家的法律制度。为此,我们必须改变我们的观点。法学界的主流倾向于用法律的内在逻辑来解释法律,认为法律是一个自治的逻辑系统。这就是通常所说的“内在视角”。我们主张“从外部看法”,即把法律看作众多子系统中的一个
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Understanding the Logic Behind Rule of Law in China: Guest Editor's Introduction
All four articles in this issue discuss the special logic behind the rule of law in Chinese society. The four authors probe the subject from a range of different perspectives, specifically, the legal awareness of Chinese people, the logic behind legal practice in grass-roots courts in China, the unique Ma Xiwu trial mode created by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), the evolution of perceptions of “legitimacy” in China, and the unique path of development of China’s civil society. As a mode of social governance, rule of law represents a stark contrast to the rule of men. Rule of law has a practical basis and is not simply a system devoid of substance. For this reason, the study of legal provisions alone will not allow us to gain a thorough and accurate understanding of the legal conditions of a country. It is necessary to explore how these legal provisions are put into practice in daily life. Studying the intrinsic logic in legal provisions alone will not allow us to understand the various paradoxes in the legal system of a country. It is necessary to identify these paradoxes in the social environment where the laws are applied. Transplanting the legal system of a developed country in order to promote the process of domestic rule of law is not enough. Instead, efforts must be made to find a legal system that is suited to the country in question. For that purpose, we have to alter our perspective. The mainstream in law circles is prone to interpret the law using its intrinsic logic, regarding it as a self-governed logical system. This is what is usually referred to as the “intrinsic perspective.” We advocate “looking at the law from the outside,” that is, regarding the law as one of a multitude of subsystems
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