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The Political Logic of China's New Environmental Courts

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TLDR
Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper showed that the Guiyang court's docket is dominated by minor criminal cases, rather than more ambitious attempts to hold polluters accountable, and pointed out that even the most active environmental courts do not necessarily tackle China's most pressing environmental problems.
Abstract
China boasts over 130 environmental courts opened between 2007 and 2013, a trend that promises to re-shape environmental law. What accounts for the political appeal of specialized justice? Overall, China’s specialized environmental courts are a method for local officials to signal commitment to environmental protection and a forum to defuse potentially explosive disputes. They symbolize the increasing importance placed by China’s leaders on environmental issues, while also offering welcome flexibility. Courts can accept cases when disputes are rising, and turn them away when local power holders are involved and caution appears prudent. Many courts struggle to find enough cases to survive, and even the most active courts do not necessarily tackle China’s most pressing environmental problems. A new analysis shows that the Guiyang court’s docket is dominated by minor criminal cases — crackdowns against powerless rural residents, rather than more ambitious attempts to hold polluters accountable.

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References
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Beyond Global Convergence: Conflicts of Legitimacy in a Chinese Lower Court

TL;DR: Li et al. as discussed by the authors examined the localization of global legal institutions by the case study of a lower court in China's Hebei Province and found that the legal institutions have survived in China judicial practice by adapting to indigenous social and political demands and becoming localized.
Posted Content

Leniency in Chinese Criminal Law? Everyday Justice in Henan

TL;DR: Li et al. as mentioned in this paper examined one-year of publicly available criminal judgments from one basic-level rural county court and one intermediate court in Henan Province in order to better understand trends in routine criminal adjudication in China.
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Seeking One's Day in Court: Chinese regime responsiveness to international legal norms on AIDS carriers' and pollution victims' rights

TL;DR: In this article, international actors have worked with Chinese NGOs and state officials to found legal aid centers that provide information and advocacy to protect the rights of pollution victims and AIDS carriers, and their financial backers seek to bring forward "impact litigation" cases in the courts to establish model decisions for other plaintiffs, attorneys, and judges to follow.
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Establishing an Environmental Public Interest Litigation System and Promoting the Building of an Ecological Civilization

TL;DR: In this paper, a new environmental protection mechanism, giving full play to the dynamic role of the judiciary, and making up for the deficiencies in environmental administrative law enforcement, is proposed, based on the experiences of other countries in using judicial means to protect the ecological environment.