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Advocating Democracy: The Role of Lawyers in Taiwan's Political Transformation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 December 2018

Abstract

Litigation has not been a significant strategy in Taiwan for challenging injustice due to the use of the Civil Law tradition as a model for the Republic of China legal system and the diminished autonomy of the ROC legal profession and legal system under martial law and authoritarian rule. Individual lawyers, however, were among the leading proponents of reform during Taiwan's recent transition to democratic rule. Furthermore, one of the significant liberalizing reforms ushered in by the democratic transition has been the reform of the ROC legal profession. We examine the contribution of some lawyers to democratization and consider what role the reconstituted ROC legal profession may play in the political economy of Taiwan in the future.

Type
Symposium: Lawyering in Repressive States
Copyright
Copyright © American Bar Foundation, 1995 

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Footnotes

The authors thank Tun-jen Cheng, Steven J. Ellman, Jau-Yuan Hwang, Frank Upham, and three anonymous Law and Social Inquiry referees for their comments and criticisms of earlier drafts, and Chi-min Yu for his research assistance.

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