Between the Prerogative and the Normative States: The Evolving Power to Detain in China’s Political-Legal System

The Law and Ethics of Human Rights 16 (1):61-97 (2022)
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Abstract

This article uses Ernst Fraenkel’s dual-state framework as an analytical tool to study those conflicting imperatives and constitutional tensions with a focus on the power to detain. This article makes the argument that China has emerged as a dual state with a normal state that functions increasingly with a rule-based government in inter-personal matters and a prerogative state that solidifies control in areas that are regarded as political sensitive. Overall, while the equilibrium between the normative and prerogative states has been evolving in China, it has remained stable. The Party has been able to build a relatively self-defined and self-referencing legal system to provide the certainty and order that the Chinese political economy demands while maintaining a zone of exception, expansive and continuing to evolve, for the prerogative state to safeguard authoritarian rule.

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reprint Fu, Hualing (2022) "Between the Prerogative and the Normative States: The Evolving Power to Detain in China’s Political-Legal System". Law and Ethics of Human Rights 16(1):61-97

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