Property concepts and institutions in China: does tradition abide?

The premise of this paper is that in order to understand contemporary concepts and institutions of property in China one needs to be aware of the historical approaches towards the ownership and management of resources and assets. Legal institutions are a reflection of the ideological and material...

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Main Author: Kremzner, Mark Thaddeus
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3703
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-37032018-01-05T17:31:36Z Property concepts and institutions in China: does tradition abide? Kremzner, Mark Thaddeus The premise of this paper is that in order to understand contemporary concepts and institutions of property in China one needs to be aware of the historical approaches towards the ownership and management of resources and assets. Legal institutions are a reflection of the ideological and material conditions of a society. The persistence or reappearance of these conditions suggests that there may be some similarities between traditional, primarily Confucian, and contemporary post-Maoist property concepts and institutions. This paper explores the social, economic and ideological basis of imperial era concepts of ownership and management of land resources and investigates the interaction between state and society, or the official and private spheres. The research here demonstrates that despite officially held ideas of imperial land ownership, most land effectively was owned by actors within the private sphere by at least the early to mid-Qing. Nevertheless, the concept of ownership emphasized the community as opposed to the individual, and thus the notion of private exclusive rights in resources such as land significantly was minimal. Property institutions frequently resembled trusts or corporations, which were characterized by a separation of ownership and management powers or rights. This does not imply however that the separation was a clear one. Like contemporary uncertainties surrounding the division of ownership and management rights in state enterprises, late imperial institutions did not clearly define how a resource was to be managed. Generally such determinations must be made on a case by case basis. Law, Peter A. Allard School of Graduate 2009-01-16T18:17:57Z 2009-01-16T18:17:57Z 1995 1995-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3703 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 12662886 bytes application/pdf
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language English
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description The premise of this paper is that in order to understand contemporary concepts and institutions of property in China one needs to be aware of the historical approaches towards the ownership and management of resources and assets. Legal institutions are a reflection of the ideological and material conditions of a society. The persistence or reappearance of these conditions suggests that there may be some similarities between traditional, primarily Confucian, and contemporary post-Maoist property concepts and institutions. This paper explores the social, economic and ideological basis of imperial era concepts of ownership and management of land resources and investigates the interaction between state and society, or the official and private spheres. The research here demonstrates that despite officially held ideas of imperial land ownership, most land effectively was owned by actors within the private sphere by at least the early to mid-Qing. Nevertheless, the concept of ownership emphasized the community as opposed to the individual, and thus the notion of private exclusive rights in resources such as land significantly was minimal. Property institutions frequently resembled trusts or corporations, which were characterized by a separation of ownership and management powers or rights. This does not imply however that the separation was a clear one. Like contemporary uncertainties surrounding the division of ownership and management rights in state enterprises, late imperial institutions did not clearly define how a resource was to be managed. Generally such determinations must be made on a case by case basis. === Law, Peter A. Allard School of === Graduate
author Kremzner, Mark Thaddeus
spellingShingle Kremzner, Mark Thaddeus
Property concepts and institutions in China: does tradition abide?
author_facet Kremzner, Mark Thaddeus
author_sort Kremzner, Mark Thaddeus
title Property concepts and institutions in China: does tradition abide?
title_short Property concepts and institutions in China: does tradition abide?
title_full Property concepts and institutions in China: does tradition abide?
title_fullStr Property concepts and institutions in China: does tradition abide?
title_full_unstemmed Property concepts and institutions in China: does tradition abide?
title_sort property concepts and institutions in china: does tradition abide?
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3703
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