Larry Catá Backer's comments on current issues in transnational law and policy. These essays focus on the constitution of regulatory communities (political, economic, and religious) as they manage their constituencies and the conflicts between them. The context is globalization. This is an academic field-free zone: expect to travel "without documents" through the sometimes strongly guarded boundaries of international relations, constitutional, international, comparative, and corporate law.
Wednesday, February 28, 2024
Tianhao Chen, Wei Xu and Xiaohong Yu:The Perks and Perils of Making Officials Appear in Court (European Chinese Law Research Hub)
a Tsinghua University team of Tianhao Chen, Wei Xu and Xiaohong Yu introduce their assessment of the Chief Officials' Appearance System. Since 2015, this system requires state agency representatives to show up in court when citizens sue their offices. After analyzing court decisions and extensive fieldwork, the authors find that the grand expectations related to this reform were not quite met.
One
of the most interesting aspects of the paper is the unmasking of the difficulties of aligning a human body with an office. That identity between an aggregation--a corporation, an administrative agency, a mass organization--is tempting. Aggregated abstractions are hard to discipline without translating its habits, actions, and mores into a bodily form. The traditional way for incarnation of abstractions--the state, a religion, any sort of social collective, is to cultivate a collective belief that this abstraction can take human form--institutions made flesh. Human collectives, irrespective of their ideologies or lifeworlds, are littered with the human incarnation of abstracted collectives. Logos must be humanized. But humans are not abstractions--and when we come close to making that a reality--with big data supported generative intelligence--we tend to panic. Instead, one investing incarnation with theater. And like all theater it produces imaginary effects. When administrators are required to come to court to defend their discretionary actions themselves, then, one can expect a performance--but one with little connection to the exercise of discretion that forms the basis of complaint. And that is the pity. But in a system in which legality is meant to coordinate and manage discretionary decision making the theater of officials brought before officials offers little promise change. All administrative states face the same issue--the disciplining of administrative discretion for abuse, carelessness and failure to judge adequately--the context with Chinese characteristics merely presents itself a little differently than the challenges of European systems of administrative supervision overseen by a growing techno-bureaucracy. It is more likely that big-data based modeling overseen by an autonomous and generative intelligence would produce a more precisely rational system of assessment. But it is the theater that one craves. And that is precisely what the marvelous analysis of The Perks and Perils of Making Officials Appear in Court demonstrates.
I am cross posting the essay below. The original ECLRH post may be accessed HERE.
And as a plug for the marvelous work at the European Chinese Law
Research Hub: if you have observations, analyses or pieces of research
that are not publishable as a paper but should get out there, or want to
spread event information, calls for papers or job openings, or have a
paper forthcoming- do not hesitate to contact Marianne von Bloomberg.
A new paper by Tianhao Chen, Wei Xu and Xiaohong Yu
In 2015, the revision of China’s Administrative Litigation Law
introduced the Chief Officials’ Appearance System (COAS). The system
requires agency leaders themselves, rather than their legal counsel, to
appear in court and defend their administrative actions. Unlike other
post-2014 legal reforms aimed at empowering the judicial system and
fending off local protectionism, the COAS uniquely enhance the
engagement of political officials in the judiciary process. This
approach is based on the belief that increased participation will help
officials to gain a better understanding of public concerns and improve
administrative litigation quality. The detailed workings of the COAS
were laid out in this previous blogpost by Nina Rotermund.
In this comprehensive study,
we set out to assess how and whether the optimistic goals set for the
COAS were achieved. Through an empirical analysis of 1551 administrative
litigation cases in a Beijing local court and extensive field research
across 12 other provinces, the study uncovers unexpected outcomes that
merit a closer examination.
Contrary to official expectations, we find that the COAS reproduces
the administrative grievances that it is tasked to resolve. Data from
Beijing revealed that plaintiffs were 5.08 times more likely to appeal
or file a new suit over the same issue when chief officials made court
appearances. This tendency was attributed to a mismatch between the
plaintiffs’ expectations for meaningful engagement and the
often-detached demeanour of the officials, who sometimes resorted to
reading from prepared statements without genuinely addressing the
plaintiffs’ concerns. This lack of meaningful interaction left
plaintiffs dissatisfied, propelling them to pursue further legal
avenues.
Moreover, the number of administrative cases overall and the rates of
the government losing cases before district leaders’ court attendances
in Beijing’s 16 districts were not significantly higher than after they
appeared in courts, indicating that lawful governance did not improve.
This issue is related to the officials’ generally apathetic approach to
court appearances. Statistics indicate that 73.6% of officials planned
to conduct the required court visits only in the fourth quarter, when
the annual cadre evaluation was underway. This figure is
disproportionately higher than the proportions in the other three
quarters. Further, the amount of officials’ appearances in court barely
surpassed the number of appearances required to fulfil the performance
evaluation criteria. This indicates that officials’ appearances are more
about fulfilling administrative assessment requirements rather than
genuinely improving lawful administration.
“[…] plaintiffs were the so-called nail households (dingzihu 钉子户),
ones who refused to relocate and came to court only to claim better
compensation. They wouldn’t be pleased by simply meeting the officials
in person. Instead, sometimes they even interrogated the officials and
we had to interrupt and stop them.”
Judge in Qinghai, August 2022
Despite this, the study also observed surprisingly impartial and even
strategic responses from the court. Statistical analysis of Beijing
data shows that the involvement of district leaders in court did not
skew judicial outcomes in favour of the government. This is partly due
to the strategic appointment of high-ranking judges in cases involving
chief officials, ensuring a balance of authority in the courtroom.
Moreover, the analysis reveals a nuanced trend wherein courts are more
likely to rule against government officials who are nearing the end of
their term, suggesting a strategic consideration of future relations
with the administrative agencies.
Expanding the study nationwide revealed similar trends across China,
albeit with regional variations. Through the “China Judicial Politics
Database,” which includes 70% of publicly available cases, we identified
28,805 instances of official court appearances. Of these, a mere 146
involved officials at the bureau and deputy bureau levels, noting that
the overall frequency of government leaders appearing in court remains
low nationwide. Interviews conducted with judges, lawyers, and
government officials from 12 provinces, including Zhejiang, Henan,
Guizhou, Jiangsu, Guangdong, Sichuan, Qinghai, Shaanxi, Tianjin,
Liaoning, Hebei, and Xinjiang, presented a complex but consistent
picture. Similar to Beijing, official court appearances were rare and
typically motivated by assessment requirements, leading to tense
courtroom dynamics between disinterested officials and pragmatic
plaintiffs. Courts employed diverse strategies to manage their
interactions with the government, sometimes using the theatrical nature
of appearances to exert pressure.
“[…] sometimes I would intentionally tolerate plaintiffs’ emotional expressions to exert extra pressure on administrative agencies.”
Judge in Zhejiang, April 2022
In sum, the study reveals that, contrary to what the creators of COAS
had expected, the COAS has not significantly ameliorated administrative
dispute resolution. Instead, it has resulted in a renewed triad of
administrative litigation: apathetic state agencies, increasingly
agitated plaintiffs and strategically empowered courts.
The unintended impacts of the COAS carry certain implications.
Despite previous views of administrative litigation in China as no more
than a “frail weapon” due to political constraints, the courts appear
somewhat empowered, benefiting from the cumulative effects of several
reform measures implemented over the last four decades and the strategic
behaviours of judges. Additionally, plaintiffs’ willingness to pursue
further legal action, fueled by an increased legal awareness and desire
for justice, challenges the notion that official appearances alone
would placate citizens. Still water runs deep, and the perverse impact
of the COAS implies that the rule-based approach to dispute resolution
would be a more desirable and effective route than the paternalistic
approach.
The paper ‘Administrative Litigation in China: Assessing the Chief Officials’ Appearance System’ was published in The China Quarterly (free draft available here). Tianhao Chen
is an associate professor at the School of Public Policy and Management
at Tsinghua University. His research focuses on administrative law,
administrative agreements, judicial governance and technology ethics.
His work has been published in Chinese Journal of Law, China Legal
Science and Law Science.
Wei XU is a PhD candidate studying at the School of Public Policy
and Management at Tsinghua University. Her research focuses on platform
antitrust, judicial reform, public administration and law.
Xiaohong Yu
(corresponding author) is an associate professor in the department of
political science at Tsinghua University. Her research focuses on
Chinese politics, judicial politics and empirical legal studies. Her
work has been published in Journal of Empirical Legal Studies, The China
Review and Tsinghua University Law Journal.She can be contacted at xyu[at]tsinghua.edu.cn.
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