Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-zzh7m Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-30T06:39:48.982Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Practice of Law as an Obstacle to Justice: Chinese Lawyers at Work

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

Abstract

This article helps strengthen our comparative and theoretical understanding of lawyers as gatekeepers to justice by analyzing the screening practices of lawyers in a non-Western context. The explanation for Chinese lawyers' aversion to representing workers with labor grievances focuses on their own working conditions, on the organization of their legal labor, and on their evaluations of the moral character of prospective clients. By linking the screening practices of Chinese lawyers to their socioeconomic insecurity and to popular stereotypes informing and legitimating their screening decisions, this article identifies institutional and cultural obstacles not only to the official justice system but also to cause lawyering. After establishing motives for screening clients, this article then demonstrates lawyers' screening methods: by defining legal reality in strategic and often misleading ways, lawyers use the law as a weapon against the interests of the individuals who seek their help.

Type
Articles of General Interest
Copyright
© 2006 Law and Society Association.

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

The research on which this article is based was funded by the Ford Foundation (Beijing). I express my profound gratitude to Wang Ping and Weiwei Shen for their research assistance at the BC Law Firm in 2001. Herbert Kritzer, three anonymous reviewers, and an editorial board member of Law & Society Review provided particularly helpful guidance throughout the revision process. This article also benefited enormously from the comments and suggestions of Gardner Bovingdon, Deborah Davis, Elizabeth Hoffmann, Fu Hualing, Mary Gallagher, William Hurst, Scott Kennedy, Robin Leidner, Sida Liu, Xiaoxia Michelson, Carl Minzner, Brian Powell, Brian Steensland, Mary Nell Trautner, and Pamela Walters. Mara Lazda and Emily Meanwell provided valuable editorial assistance. I am solely responsible for all remaining defects and omissions. Finally, I also thank Tao Jiwei, Li Lulu, and Zhou Xiaoping for their many years of help, support, and friendship.

References

References

Abbott, Andrew (1988) The System of Professions: An Essay on the Division of Expert Labor. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Abel, Richard L. (1988) “The Crisis Is Injury, Not Liability,” 37 Proceedings of the Academy of Political Science 3141.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
All-China Lawyers Association (ACLA) (2003) Message board, 19 October, http://www.acla.org.cn/forum/. On file with author.Google Scholar
All-China Lawyers Association (2004) Message board, 8 April and 9 October, http://www.acla.org.cn/forum/. On file with author.Google Scholar
American Bar Association (ABA) (1994) Legal Needs and Civil Justice: A Survey of Americans. Major Findings from the Comprehensive Legal Needs Study. Chicago: American Bar Association.Google Scholar
Bai, Gang (1998) “Dangshiren Gao Lüshi Yuanhe Er Qi [Why Clients Are Suing Their Lawyers],” Beijing Qingnian Bao, June.Google Scholar
Bassingthwaighte, Mark (2003) “Screen Clients to Avoid Trouble,” The Virginia Lawyer's Weekly, August. http://www.virginialaw.com/alpsva12.cfm (accessed 31 October 2004, on file with author).Google Scholar
Beijing Tongji Nianjian [Beijing Statistical Yearbook] (2001). Beijing: Zhongguo Tongji Chubanshe.Google Scholar
Besharov, Douglas J., ed. (1990) Legal Services for the Poor: Time for Reform. Washington, D.C.: The AEI Press.Google Scholar
Black, Donald (1989) Sociological Justice. New York and Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Blecher, Marc J. (2002) “Hegemony and Workers' Politics in China,” 170 China Q. 283303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blumberg, Abraham S. (1967) “The Practice of Law as a Confidence Game: Organizational Cooptation of a Profession,” 1 Law & Society Rev. 1540.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blumberg, Abraham S. (1973) “Lawyers With Convictions,” in Blumberg, A., ed., The Scales of Justice. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books.Google Scholar
Bo, Licheng (2004) “‘Fengxian Daili’ Hou Nan Shou Qian: Lüshisuo Gao Weitou Danwei Yaohui 40 Wan [Collecting a Contingency Fee Is Difficult: A Law Firm Sues an Organizational Client for ¥400,000],” Dianchi Zaobao, 25 Sept., p. 8.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, Pierre (1987) “The Force of Law: Toward a Sociology of the Juridical Field,” 38 Hastings Law J. 805–53.Google Scholar
Cai, Yongshun (2002) “The Resistance of Chinese Laid-Off Workers in the Reform Period,” 170 China Q. 327–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cai, Yongshun, & Yang, Songcai (2005) “State Power and Unbalanced Legal Development in China,” 14 J. of Contemporary China 117–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cain, Maureen (1979) “The General Practice Lawyer and the Client: Towards a Radical Conception,” 7 International J. of the Sociology of Law 331–54.Google Scholar
Cantril, Albert H. (1996) Agenda for Access: The American People and Civil Justice. Final Report on the Implications of the Comprehensive Legal Needs Study. Chicago: American Bar Association.Google Scholar
Chan, Anita (2001) China's Workers Under Assault: The Exploitation of Labor in a Globalizing Economy. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe.Google Scholar
Chan, Anita (2004) “Some Hope for Optimism for Chinese Labor,” 13 New Labor Forum 6775.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chan, Anita, & Senser, Robert A. (1997) “China's Troubled Workers,” 76 Foreign Affairs 104–17 (April/May).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chang, Leslie (2002) “Legal Remedies: In China, Courts Find New Muscle as They Take on Medical Cases,” The Wall Street Journal, 7 Jan., p. A1.Google Scholar
Chen, Min, & Gang, Yang (2004) “Guansi Da Bu Ying Lüshi Cheng Beigao [Upon Losing Law Suit Lawyer Becomes Defendant],” Yangzi Wanbao, 24 Feb.Google Scholar
Cheng, Lucie, & Rosett, Arthur (1991) “Contract with a Chinese Face: Socially Embedded Factors in the Transformation from Hierarchy to Market, 1978–1989,” 5 J. of Chinese Law 143244.Google Scholar
Chinese Law & Government (2002) 35 (November–December).Google Scholar
Chow, Chung-yan (2004) “Shenzhen Struggles to Deal with Rising Labour Disputes: Migrant Workers Continue to Suffer Long Hours and Non-Payment by Employers,” South China Morning Post, 14 Aug., p. 4.Google Scholar
Daniels, Stephen, & Martin, Joanne (2000) “‘The Impact That It Has Had Is Between People's Ears’: Tort Reform, Mass Culture, and Plaintiffs' Lawyers,” 50 DePaul Law Rev. 453–96.Google Scholar
Daniels, Stephen, & Martin, Joanne (2001) “‘We Live on the Edge of Extinction All the Time,’,” in Van Hoy, J., ed., Legal Professions: Work, Structure and Organization. Amsterdam and London: JAI.Google Scholar
Daniels, Stephen, & Martin, Joanne (2002) “It Was the Best of Times, It Was the Worst of Times: The Precarious Nature of Plaintiffs' Practice in Texas,” 80 Texas Law Rev. 1781–828.Google Scholar
Dezalay, Yves, & Garth, Bryant (1997) “Law, Lawyers and Social Capital: ‘Rule of Law’ versus Relational Capitalism,” 6 Social and Legal Studies 109–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fan, Tao, & Hongmei, Dou (2004) “Kan Bing Ye Suan Xiaofei: Beijing Yiliao Fuwu Jian Ru ‘Xiao Fa’ [Seeing a Doctor Also Counts as Consumerism: Medical Services in Beijing Gradually Entering the ‘Consumer Protection Law’],” Beijing Ribao, 15 July.Google Scholar
Felstiner, William L. F., et al. (19801981) “The Emergence and Transformation of Disputes: Naming, Blaming, Claiming … 15 Law & Society Rev. 631–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freidson, Eliot (1970) Professional Dominance: The Social Structure of Medical Care. New York: Atherton Press.Google Scholar
Friedman, Lawrence M., & Zile, Zigurds L. (1964) “Soviet Legal Profession: Recent Developments in Law and Practice,” 32 Wisconsin Law Rev. 3277.Google Scholar
Frohmann, Lisa (1991) “Discrediting Victims' Allegations of Sexual Assault: Prosecutorial Accounts of Case Rejections,” 38 Social Problems 213–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fu, Hualing, & Choy, D. W. (2004) “From Mediation to Adjucation: Settling Labor Disputes in China,” 3 China Rights Forum, 29 Sept., pp. 1722.Google Scholar
Gallagher, Mary E. (2005) “‘Use the Law as Your Weapon!’ The Rule of Law and Labor Conflict in the PRC,” in Diamant, N. et al., eds., Engaging the Law in China: State, Society and Possibilities for Justice. Stanford: Stanford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Gawande, Atul (2005) “The Malpractice Mess: Who Pays the Price When Patients Sue Doctors? The New Yorker 6371 (14 November).Google Scholar
Genn, Hazel (1999) Paths to Justice: What People Do and Think About Going to Law. Oxford, United Kingdom, and Portland, OR: Hart Publishing.Google Scholar
Gibeaut, John (1997) “Avoiding Trouble at the Mill,” 83 ABA J. 4854.Google Scholar
Gieryn, Thomas F. (1999) Cultural Boundaries of Science: Credibility on the Line. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Guthrie, Doug (2000) “The Evidence Is Clear: Foreign Investment Spurs Workplace Reform in China,” Chronicle of Higher Education B11 (17 March).Google Scholar
Guthrie, Doug (2002) “The Transformation of Labor Relations in China's Emerging Market Economy,” in Leicht, K., ed., Research in Social Stratification and Mobility, Vol. 19 ( The Future of Market Transition). Amsterdam: JAI Press.Google Scholar
Guthrie, Doug (2003) “The Quiet Revolution: The Emergence of Capitalism,” 25 Harvard International Rev. 4853.Google Scholar
Haltom, William, & McCann, Michael (2004) Distorting the Law: Politics, Media, and the Litigation Crisis. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harrington, Christine B., & Yngvesson, Barbara (1990) “Interpretive Sociolegal Research,” 15 Law & Social Inquiry 135–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
He, Xin, et al. (2004) “Lüshi Daibiao Jianyi Shui Shu Guansi Shui Fu Lüshi Fei [Lawyer Representative Suggests That the Losing Party in Litigation Pay Lawyer Fees],” Nanfang Ribao, 11 Feb.Google Scholar
Heinz, John P. (1983) “The Power of Lawyers,” 17 Georgia Law Rev. 891911.Google Scholar
Heinz, John P., et al. (2005) Urban Lawyers: The New Social Structure of the Bar. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Heumann, Milton, & Cassak, Lance (20002001) “Profiles in Justice? Police Discretion, Symbolic Assailants, and Stereotyping,” 53 Rutgers Law Rev 911–78.Google Scholar
Honig, Emily, & Hershatter, Gail (1988) Personal Voices: Chinese Women in the 1980s. Stanford: Stanford Univ. Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hosticka, Carl J. (1979) “We Don't Care About What Happened, We Only Care About What Is Going to Happen: Lawyer-Client Negotiations of Reality,” 26 Social Problems 599610.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hu, Yongmou, & Tong, Rui (2004) “‘Lüshi Fei Zhuan Fu’ Rang Baisu Fang Maidan [Lawyer Fee Shifting Makes the Loser in Litigation Pick up the Tab],” Chutian Dushi Bao, 19 Nov.Google Scholar
Hurst, William (2004) “Understanding Contentious Collective Action by Chinese Laid-Off Workers: The Importance of Regional Political Economy,” 39 Studies in Comparative International Development 94120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hurst, William, & O'Brien, Kevin J. (2002) “China's Contentious Pensioners,” 170 China Q. 345–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jacob, Herbert (1995) Law and Politics in the United States, 2d ed. New York: HarperCollins College Publishers.Google Scholar
Jiang, Yu, et al. (2003) “Baisu Hou Zhuanggao Lüshi Shiwusuo Yaoqiu Duifang Fan Shuang Bei Lüshi Fei [After Losing in Litigation, Law Firm Is Named in a Law Suit Demanding a Refund of Double the Lawyer Fees],” Dalian Wanbao, 19 Aug.Google Scholar
Johnson, Ian (2004) Wild Grass: Three Stories of Change in Modern China. New York: Pantheon.Google Scholar
Kahn, Joseph (2003) “China's Workers Risk Limbs in Export Drive,” The New York Times, 7 April, p. A3.Google Scholar
Karsten, Peter (19971998) “Enabling the Poor to Have Their Day in Court: The Sanctioning of Contingency Fee Contracts, A History to 1940,” 47 DePaul Law Rev. 231–60.Google Scholar
Katz, Jack (1982) Poor People's Lawyers in Transition. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers Univ. Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Katz, Michael B. (1989) The Undeserving Poor: From the War on Poverty to the War on Welfare. New York: Pantheon Books.Google Scholar
Kernen, Antoine (1999) “Out of Work in the State Sector,” in Schell, O. & Shambaugh, D., eds., The China Reader: The Reform Era. New York: Vintage Books.Google Scholar
Kidder, Robert L. (1974) “Formal Litigation and Professional Insecurity: Legal Entrepreneurship in South India,” 9 Law & Society Rev. 1138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kritzer, Herbert M. (1991) “Propensity to Sue in England and the United States: Blaming and Claiming in Tort Cases,” 18 J. of Law and Society 400–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kritzer, Herbert M. (1997) “Contingency Fee Lawyers as Gatekeepers in the American Civil Justice System,” 81 Judicature 22–9.Google Scholar
Kritzer, Herbert M. (1998a) “Contingent-Fee Lawyers and Their Clients: Settlement Expectations, Settlement Realities, and Issues of Control in the Lawyer-Client Relationship,” 23 Law and Social Inquiry 795821.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kritzer, Herbert M. (1998b) Legal Advocacy: Lawyers and Nonlawyers at Work. Ann Arbor: Univ. of Michigan Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kritzer, Herbert M. (1998c) “The Wages of Risk: The Returns of Contingency Fee Legal Practice,” 47 DePaul Law Rev. 267319.Google Scholar
Kritzer, Herbert M. (2002) “Lawyer Fees and Lawyer Behavior in Litigation: What Does the Empirical Literature Really Say?,” 80 Texas Law Rev. 1943–83.Google Scholar
Kritzer, Herbert M. et al (2004) Risks, Reputations, and Rewards: Contingency Fee Legal Practice in the United States. Stanford: Stanford Univ. Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kritzer, Herbert M., & Krishnan, Jayanth K. (1999) “Lawyers Seeking Clients, Clients Seeking Lawyers: Sources of Contingency Fee Cases and Their Implications for Case Handling,” 21 Law & Policy 347–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kritzer, Herbert M., et al. (1991a) “The Aftermath of Injury: Cultural Factors in Compensation Seeking in Canada and the United States,” 25 Law & Society Rev. 499544.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kritzer, Herbert M. (1991b) “To Confront or Not to Confront: Measuring Claiming Rates in Discrimination Grievances,” 25 Law & Society Rev. 875–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kunzke, Katja (1998) “The Hazard: Failure to Screen Cases,” 84 ABA J. 57.Google Scholar
Lamont, Michèle, & Fournier, Marcel, eds. (1992) Cultivating Differences: Symbolic Boundaries and the Making of Inequality. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Lamont, Michèle, & Molnár, Virág (2002) “The Study of Boundaries in the Social Sciences,” 28 Annual Rev. of Sociology 167–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Law and Contemporary Problems (1984) Special Issue on Attorney Fee Shifting, Vol. 47.Google Scholar
Lee, Ching Kwan (2000a) “The ‘Revenge of History’: Collective Memories and Labor Protests in Northeastern China,” 1 Ethnography 217–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, Ching Kwan (2000b) “Pathways of Labor Insurgency,” in Perry, E. & Selden, M., eds., Chinese Society: Change, Conflict and Resistance. London and New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Lee, Ching Kwan (2002) “From the Specter of Mao to the Spirit of the Law: Labor Insurgency in China,” 31 Theory and Society 189228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lees, Sue (1994) “Lawyers' Work as Constitutive of Gender Relations,” in Cain, M. & Harrington, C., eds., Lawyers in a Postmodern World: Translation and Transgression. Buckingham, United Kingdom: Open Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Li, Gangtu & Qingju, Xun (2003) “‘Dagongzai Lüshi’ Zhou Litai Xianzhuang Kundun [The Current Difficulties of the Workers' Lawyer, Zhou Litai] posted by the Guangzhou Ribao, 8 Dec. http://www.dayoo.com/content/2003-12/08/content_1318244.htm (accessed 31 October 2004, on file with author).Google Scholar
Li, Guangyu (2004) “You Guan Laodong Zhengyi Chuli Wenti de Taolun [A Discussion of the Issue of Handling Labor Disputes],” 2 Zhongguo Laodong 42–5.Google Scholar
Liebman, Benjamin L. (19971998) “Class Action Litigation in China,” 111 Harvard Law Rev. 1523–41.Google Scholar
Liebman, Benjamin L. (1999) “Legal Aid and Public Interest Law in China,” 34 Texas International Law J. 211–86.Google Scholar
Liu, Bin (2001) “Lüshi Shoufei Gai bu Gai You Ge ‘Pu’? [Should Lawyer Fees Have a Schedule?],” Chongqing Wanbao, 28 Nov.Google Scholar
Liu, Xianren, & Hong, Chen (2004) ““Lüshi Fei Daodi Gai Shui Chu?” [Who Ultimately Should Pay the Lawyer Fee?] Guangzhou Ribao, 30 Sept.Google Scholar
Lofquist, William S. (2002) “Closing the Courthouse Door: Constructing Undeservingness in the Tort and Habeas Corpus Reform Movements,” 22 Sociological Spectrum 191223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loseke, Donileen R. (1992) The Battered Woman and Shelters: The Social Construction of Wife Abuse. Albany: State Univ. of New York Press.Google Scholar
Lu, Guzhi (2004) “Dangshiren Xian Lüshi Fuwu Bu Jiji [Client Suspects Lawyer Not a Zealous Advocate],” Dongnan Zaobao, 12 Nov.Google Scholar
Ma, Josephine (2004a) “No Wages for Workers No New Year,” South China Morning Post, 19 Jan., p. 4.Google Scholar
Ma, Josephine (2004b) “Wife Battles for Pay Her Husband Never Saw,” South China Morning Post, 20 Jan., p. 4.Google Scholar
Ma, Josephine (2004c) “Workers Face a Long Wait for Justice,” South China Morning Post, 21 Jan., p. 4.Google Scholar
Martin, Joanne, & Daniels, Stephen (1997) “Access Denied: ‘Tort Reform’ Rhetoric is Closing the Courthouse Door,” 33 Trial 2632.Google Scholar
Mather, Lynn, & Yngvesson, Barbara (19801981) “Language, Audience, and the Transformation of Disputes,” 15 Law & Society Rev. 775822.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mather, Lynn, et al. (2001) Divorce Lawyers at Work: Varieties of Professionalism in Practice. Oxford and New York: Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
McBarnet, Doreen (1994) “Legal Creativity: Law, Capital and Legal Avoidance,” in Cain, M. & Harrington, C., eds., Lawyers in a Postmodern World: Translation and Transgression. Buckingham, United Kingdom: Open Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Merry, Sally Engle (1990) Getting Justice and Getting Even: Legal Consciousness Among Working-Class Americans. Chicago: Univ. of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Michelson, Ethan (2003) “Unhooking from the State: Chinese Lawyers in Transition.” Ph.D. dissertation. Department of Sociology, University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Michelson, Ethan (2006) “From ‘Serving the People’ to Serving Capital in the Chinese Legal System: Solidifying the Place of Politics in the Study of Lawyers.” Unpublished manuscript.Google Scholar
Miller, Richard E., & Sarat, Austin (19801981) “Grievances, Claims, and Disputes: Assessing the Adversary Culture,” 15 Law & Society Rev 525–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mohr, John W. (1994) “Soldiers, Mothers, Tramps and Others: Discourse Roles in the 1907 New York City Charity Directory,” 22 Poetics 327–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Munger, Frank (1994) “Miners and Lawyers: Law Practice and Class Conflict in Appalachia, 1872–1920,” in Cain, M. & Harrington, C., Lawyers in a Postmodern World: Translation and Transgression. Buckingham, United Kingdom: Open Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Nelson, Robert L. (1988) Partners with Power: The Social Transformation of the Large Law Firm. Berkeley: Univ. of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nielsen, Laura Beth (2000) “Situating Legal Consciousness: Experiences and Attitudes of Ordinary Citizens about Law and Street Harassment,” 34 Law & Society Rev. 1055–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oakley, Sheila (2002) Labor Relations in China's Socialist Market Economy: Adapting to the Global Market. Westport, CT: Quorum Books.Google Scholar
O'Brien, Kevin J., & Li, Lianjiang (1996) “Villagers and Popular Resistance in Contemporary China,” 22 Modern China 2861.Google Scholar
Potter, Pitman B. (1994) “Riding the Tiger: Legitimacy and Legal Culture in Post-Mao China,” 138 China Q. 325–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Potter, Pitman B. (1999) “The Chinese Legal System: Continuing Commitment to the Primacy of State Power,” 159 China Q. 673–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robinson, Mary Beth S. (1998) “Putting Clients to the Test: Careful Screening at Initial Interview Can Minimize Malpractice Risks,” 84 ABA J. 80.Google Scholar
Rosenthal, Douglas E. (1974) Lawyer and Client: Who's in Charge? New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books.Google Scholar
Rueschemeyer, Dietrich (1989) “Comparing Legal Professions: State-Centered Approaches,” in Abel, R. & Lewis, P., eds., Comparative Theories, Vol. 3 of Lawyers in Society. Berkeley: Univ. of California Press.Google Scholar
Sandefur, Rebecca L. (2004) “Organization of Lawyers' Pro-Bono Service and Poor People's Use of Lawyers for Civil Matters,” Presented at the Law and Society Association Annual Meeting, Chicago (27–30 May).Google Scholar
Santos, Boaventura de Sousa (2000) “Law and Democracy: (Mis)trusting the Global Reform of Courts,” in Jenson, J. & Santos, B., eds., Globalizing Institutions: Case Studies in Regulation and Innovation. Aldershot, United Kingdom and Burlington, VT: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Sarat, Austin, & Felstiner, William L. F. (1995) Divorce Lawyers and Their Clients: Power & Meaning in the Legal Process. New York and Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Sarat, Austin, & Scheingold, Stuart eds (1998) Cause Lawyering: Political Commitments and Professional Responsibilities. New York and Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Sarat, Austin, & Scheingold, Stuart eds (2001) Cause Lawyering and the State in a Global Era. New York and Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scheingold, Stuart A., & Sarat, Austin (2004) Something to Believe In: Politics, Professionalism, and Cause Lawyering. Stanford: Stanford Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Serber, David (1980) “Resolution or Rhetoric: Managing Complaints in the California Department of Insurance,” in Nader, L., ed., No Access to Law: Alternatives to the American Judicial System. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Seron, Carroll, et al. (2001) “The Impact of Legal Counsel on Outcomes for Poor Tenants in New York City's Housing Courts: Results of a Randomized Experiment,” 35 Law & Society Rev. 419–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silbey, Susan S., et al. (1993) Differential Use of Courts by Minority and Non-Minority Populations in New Jersey. Trenton, NJ: New Jersey Judiciary, Supreme Court Task Force on Minority Concerns.Google Scholar
Solinger, Dorothy J. (2002) “Labour Market Reform and the Plight of the Laid-Off Proletariat,” 170 China Q. 304–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Solinger, Dorothy J. (2004) “The New Crowd of the Dispossessed: The Shift of the Urban Proletariat from Master to Mendicant,” in Gries, P. & Rosen, S., eds., State and Society in 21st-Century China: Crisis, Contention, and Legitimation. New York and London: Routledge Curzon.Google Scholar
Stanko, Elizabeth Anne (1982) “Would You Believe This Woman? Prosecutorial Screening for ‘Credible’ Witnesses and a Problem of Justice,” in Rafter, N. & Stanko, E., eds., Judge, Lawyer, Victim, Thief: Women, Gender Roles, and Criminal Justice. Boston: Northeastern Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Su, Li (2000) Song Fa Xia Xiang: Zhongguo Jiceng Fazhi Zhidu Yanjiu [Bringing Law Down to the Countryside: Research on China's Grassroots Legal System]. Beijing: Zhongguo Zhengfa Daxue Chubanshe.Google Scholar
Sun, Guiping (2004) “Lüshi Wei Ji Shiwusuo Peiqian [Law Firm Compensates for Disciplinary Violation],” Fazhi Ribao, 19 May.Google Scholar
Thireau, Isabelle, & Linshan, Hua (1997) “Legal Disputes and the Debate about Legitimate Norms,” in Brosseau, M. et al., eds., The China Review 1997. Hong Kong: The Chinese Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Thireau, Isabelle, & Linshan, Hua (2003) “The Moral Universe of Aggrieved Chinese Workers,” 50 The China J. 83103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tian, Lianfeng (2002) “Shu le Guansi Gao Lüshi [Upon Losing a Lawsuit the Lawyer Is Sued],” Shenghuo Ribao, 20 Sept.Google Scholar
Tian, Shuangyue (2004) “Shu le Guansi Yao Chengdan Sheng Fang Lüshi Fei? Sheng Gao Yuan Dafu: Ci Wei Fazhi Jianshe Fangxiang Dan Zan Bu Ke Xing [Must the Losing Side Pay the Lawyer Fees of the Winning Side? The Provincial Supreme People's Court's Response: This Is Consistent with the Direction of Legal Construction but for the Time Being Cannot Be Put into Effect],” Nanfang Dushi Bao, 26 Nov.Google Scholar
Trubek, Louise G. (1996) “Embedded Practices: Lawyers, Clients, and Social Change,” 31 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Rev. 415–41.Google Scholar
Turk, Austin T. (1976) “Law as a Weapon in Social Conflict,” 23 Social Problems 276–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Hoy, Jerry (1999) “Markets and Contingency: How Client Markets Influence the Work of Plaintiffs' Personal Injury Lawyers,” 6 International J. of the Legal Profession 345–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Hoy, Jerry (2004) Can We Generalize About Plaintiffs' Personal Injury Lawyers? Presented at the Law and Society Association Annual Meeting, Chicago (27–30 May).Google Scholar
Wang, Chenguang, & Qicai, Gao (2000) “Lüshi Zhiye de Xianzhuang Diaocha: Wuhan Lüshi Fangtan Zongshu [A Survey on the Current State of the Legal Profession: A Summary of Interviews from Wuhan],” Zhongguo Lüshi 513 (December).Google Scholar
Wang, Huan (2004) “Xiang Aihu Women de Yanjing Yi Yang: Shi Xi Dangqian Gebie Lüshi Yu Lüshi Shiwusuo Zhiye Daode He Zhiye Jilü de Yuanyin Ji Duice [Like Taking Care of Our Eyes: A Preliminary Examination of Reasons and Counter-Measures for Violations of Professional Ethics and Discipline among a Small Number of Present-Day Lawyers and Law Firms],” Zhongguo Lüshi 34–5 (July).Google Scholar
Wang, Xiting (1990) “Bu Wei Wu Li de Dangshiren Daili Daishu [Do Not Represent Unreasonable Clients],” Lüshi Shijie 14 (September).Google Scholar
Wang, Yu & Lin, Chang (2004) “Guansi Ying De Tai Rongyi, Ju Fu Lüshi Fei [Winning Litigation Was Too Easy, Then Refused to Pay the Lawyer],” Beifang Chenbao, 4 Nov.Google Scholar
Weston, Timothy B. (2000) “China's Labor Woes: Will the Workers Crash the Party,” in Weston, T. & Jensen, L., eds., China Beyond the Headlines. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.Google Scholar
Weston, Timothy B. (2004) “The Iron Man Weeps: Joblessness and Political Legitimacy in the Chinese Rust Belt,” in Gries, P. & Rosen, S., eds. State and Society in 21st-Century China: Crisis, Contention, and Legitimation. New York and London: Routledge Curzon.Google Scholar
Woo, Margaret Y. K. (1999) “Law and Discretion in the Contemporary Chinese Courts,” 8 Pacific Rim Law & Policy 581615.Google Scholar
Xiandai Hanyu Cidian [Modern Chinese Dictionary] (1996). Beijing: Shangwu Yinshuguan.Google Scholar
Xing, Bao (2004) “Unrewarded Labours,” Shanghai Star, 15 Jan.Google Scholar
Xu, Anqi (2004) “One-Parent Family: Social Assistance for Marginal Groups,” Presented at Conference on Socioeconomic Rights in China, Dickinson College (16–18 April), on file with author.Google Scholar
Yang, Mayfair Mei-hui (1994) Gifts, Favors, and Banquets: The Art of Social Relationships in China. Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press.Google Scholar
Yao, Ying (2004) “Legal ‘Savior’ Fighting for His Fees,” China Daily, 5 July. http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2004-07/05/content_345478.htm (accessed 18 November 2005, on file with author).Google Scholar
Ye, Yong (2001) “Shu le Guansi Jiu Gao Lüshi [Lawyer Sued Upon Losing Law Suit],” Xinxi Ribao, 28, June, p. A12.Google Scholar
Zhang, Yunqiu (2005) “Law and Labor in Post-Mao China,” 14 J. Contemporary China 525–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhao, Qiancheng (2001) “Lüshi de ‘Ku Shui’ yu Duzhe de ‘Wu Shui’ [A Lawyer's ‘Bitter Water’ and a Reader's ‘Foggy Water’],” Beijing Qingian Bao, 11, June, p. 8.Google Scholar
Zhou, Mu (2004) “Shui Lai Wei Lüshi Tao ‘Gongqian’? [Who Will Collect Back Wages on Behalf of Lawyers?],” Chengdu Wanbao, 13 Dec.Google Scholar
Zhu, Sanzhu (2003) “Reforming State Institutions: Privatizing the Lawyers' System,” in Howell, J., ed., Governance in China. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.Google Scholar

Statutes Cited

Consumer Protection Law (Xiaofeizhe Quanyi Baohu Fa), passed and issued October 31, 1993, at the Fourth Session of the Standing Committee of the Eighth National People's congress, effective January 1, 1994 (1994).Google Scholar
General Principles of the Civil Law (Minfa Tongze), passed and issued April 12, 1986, at the Fourth Session of the Sixth National People's Congress, effective January 1, 1987 (1987).Google Scholar
Labor Law (Laodong Fa), promulgated July 5, 1994, at the Eighth Session of the Standing Committee of the Eighth National People's Congress, effective January 1, 1995 (1995).Google Scholar
Law on Lawyers (Lüshi Fa), passed May 15, 1996, at the Nineteenth Session of the Standing Committee of the Eighth National People's Congress, effective January 1, 1997 (1997).Google Scholar
Measures for Handling Medical Accidents (Yiliao Shigu Chuli Banfa), promulgated June 29, 1987, by the State Council (1987).Google Scholar
Measures of the People's Court on Litigation Fees (Renmin Fayuan Susongfei Banfa), issued July 12, 1989, by the Supreme People's Court, effective September 1, 1989 (1989).Google Scholar
Opinion Regarding Some Problems in the Implementation and Enforcement of the Labor Law (Guanyu Guanche Zhixing Laodong Fa Ruogan Wenti de Yijian), Document No. 309, issued August 4, 1995, by the Ministry of Labor (1995).Google Scholar
Regulations on Legal Aid (Falü Yuanzhu Tiaoli), promulgated July 16, 2003, by the State Council, effective September 1, 2003 (2003).Google Scholar
State Administration of Taxation Notice Regarding Strengthening the Levying and Auditing of Personal Taxes of Investors in Law Firms and Other Intermediary Organizations (Guojia Shuiwu Zongju Guanyu Qianghua Lüshi Shiwusuo Deng Zhongjie Jigou Touzizhe Geren Suode Shui Chazhang Zhengshou de Tongzhi), Notice No. 123, issued September 29, 2002, by the State Administration of Taxation (2002).Google Scholar