Explore the words cloud of the CLD project. It provides you a very rough idea of what is the project "CLD" about.
The following table provides information about the project.
Coordinator |
THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
Organization address contact info |
Coordinator Country | United Kingdom [UK] |
Total cost | 1˙499˙381 € |
EC max contribution | 1˙499˙381 € (100%) |
Programme |
1. H2020-EU.1.1. (EXCELLENT SCIENCE - European Research Council (ERC)) |
Code Call | ERC-2018-STG |
Funding Scheme | ERC-STG |
Starting year | 2019 |
Duration (year-month-day) | from 2019-01-01 to 2023-12-31 |
Take a look of project's partnership.
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1 | THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD | UK (OXFORD) | coordinator | 1˙499˙381.00 |
The world is in the midst of a sea change in approaches to development. The rise of nationalist politics in the U.S., U.K. and Europe have questioned commitments to global governance at the same time that China has emerged as a champion of globalization, a turn of geo-political events that would have been unfathomable ten years ago. Through its own multi-lateral institutions, China is setting a new agenda for development from Europe to Oceania. China’s approach differs from Anglo/Euro/American approaches to “law and development” (LD). Whereas LD orthodoxy has sought to improve legal institutions in poor states, Chinese do not foster rule of law abroad. Instead, Chinese view law as one set of rules, among others, to facilitate economic transactions and not to foster democratization. This distinction has sparked a global debate about the so-called “China model” as an alternative to LD. Yet there is little empirical data with which to assess the means and ends of China’s expanded footprint, a question with long-term implications for much of the developing world. This project addresses that problem by proposing that even if Chinese cross-border development does not operate through transparent rules, it nonetheless has its own notion of order. The project adopts a multi-sited, mixed method, and interdisciplinary approach—at the intersection of comparative law, developmental studies, and legal anthropology—to understand the nature of China’s order. The project has two objectives: 1. To establish the conceptual bases for the study of China’s approach to law and development by developing the first systematic study of the impacts of Chinese investment on the legal systems of developing economies. 2. To experiment with a comparative research design to theorize how China’s approach suggests a type of order that extends through a conjuncture of regional and local processes and manifests itself differently in diverse contexts.
year | authors and title | journal | last update |
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2019 |
Matthew S. Erie Viewing the “Arrangement Concerning Mutual Assistance in Court-ordered Interim Measures in Aid of Arbitral Proceedings by the Courts of the Mainland and of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region†as a Window onto the New Legal Hubs published pages: , ISSN: , DOI: |
Conflictoflaws.net | 2020-04-15 |
2020 |
Matthew Steven Erie The New Legal Hubs: The Emergent Landscape of International Commercial Dispute Resolution published pages: , ISSN: 1556-5068, DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3333765 |
SSRN Electronic Journal | 2020-04-15 |
2019 |
Matthew S. Erie Custom in the Archive: The Birth of Modern Chinese Law at the End of Empire published pages: , ISSN: , DOI: |
Empire and the Social Sciences 22 August 2019 | 2020-04-15 |
2020 |
Matthew S. Erie COVID-19 vs. BRI published pages: , ISSN: , DOI: |
CLD Research Brief | 2020-04-15 |
2019 |
Matthew S. Erie and Peter H Corne China’s Mediation Revolution? Opportunities and Challenges of the Singapore Mediation Convention published pages: , ISSN: , DOI: |
OpinioJuris | 2020-04-15 |
2019 |
Matthew S. Erie Introducing the ‘China, Law and Development’ Project: Analyzing China’s Impact on Cross-Border Legal and Regulatory Order published pages: , ISSN: , DOI: |
Oxford Business Law Blog | 2020-01-29 |
2019 |
Matthew S Erie Anticorruption as Transnational Law: The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, PRC Law, and Party Rules in China published pages: 233-279, ISSN: 0002-919X, DOI: 10.1093/ajcl/avz018 |
The American Journal of Comparative Law Vol 67, Issue 2 | 2020-01-29 |
2019 |
Matthew S. Erie Update on the China International Commercial Court published pages: , ISSN: , DOI: |
CLD Research Brief | 2020-01-29 |
2019 |
Matthew S Erie Update on the China International Commercial Court published pages: , ISSN: , DOI: |
2019-09-04 |
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The information about "CLD" are provided by the European Opendata Portal: CORDIS opendata.