8th Year Greater China Legal History Seminar Series – "Between Brutality and Benevolence: The Historical Function of Capital Punishment in China"

The CUHK LAW Greater China Legal History Seminar Series aims to serve as a forum to discuss the historical development of a great variety of legal issues of interest in the Greater China region. The next seminar, "Between Brutality and Benevolence: The Historical Function of Capital Punishment in China", will be spoken online by Professor Michelle MIAO, Associate Professor of CUHK LAW, on 13 January 2023.

Capital punishment has occupied a unique position in Chinese legal history. As a permanent fixture in imperial China's legal system, capital punishment was the sole corporal punishment consistently employed by various dynasties from Pre-Qin to the late Qing. From legislation to judicial practices, the use of ultimate punishment in Chinese history has been riddled with contradictions and complexities. This research addresses these dilemmas by placing an analytical spotlight on the functionality, rather than merely the mechanisms of state-endorsed killing. It chronicles the origins and evolution of capital punishment in pre-modern China by examining continuity and changes, execution methods and rituals, and how capital punishment was understood and experienced in history.

Details and registration: https://bit.ly/3AeBZx3

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