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2 Peking U. L.J. 2 (2014)

handle is hein.journals/pekulj2 and id is 1 raw text is: 





Vol 2, 1ssue 1, 2014


                         INTRODUCTION



                                  Zhang Yongle;


     What is the shape of China's constitution? This is a difficult puzzle for
constitutional scholars all over the world. Similar to the U.S., contemporary China has
a written constitution made in 1982; however, China's Supreme People's Court has
no power of judicial review according to the Constitution. Although The Standing
Committee of the National People's Congress is supposed to interpret the Constitution,
it rarely exercises that power. This seems a grey picture in the face of the globalization
of judicial review. Moreover, if one only reads the text of China's constitution, he can
hardly understand how China's working political system works in the real world. There
seems to be an invisible constitution behind the formal constitutional text. One might
borrow the concept constitutional convention to explain the stable part of this invisible
constitution. Yet contenders can always retort: are three decades long enough to certify
a constitutional convention?
     In recent years, this polyhedral constitution has given rise to multiple approaches
in constitutional law scholarship. Some emphasize that China's constitution ought to
be a law applicable in the judicial system, similar to the American Constitution and
the German Basic Law. Others are suspicious of this notion of ought, believing this is
merely a good wish which, although deserving sympathy, cannot find enough ground in
the original intent and the overall structure of the Chinese Constitution. For scholars who
have no political power to make constitutional decisions, it would be more rewarding to
draw the topos of the constitution than make system design.
     Among the five articles under this special topic, the three ones by Zhang Qianfan,
Gao Quanxi, and Zhang Yan constitute a compact discussion. From Zhang Qianfan's
perspective, China's Constitution can be put in judicial application right now without
waiting for a remote future. It is a commonplace that constitutional rules are selectively
applied; China should not be an exception. The existence of a variety of policy-oriented,
directive, and declarative articles in the constitutional text further necessitates careful
selection of applicable articles. Eliminating declarative articles, economic policy-
related articles, and the articles on civic duty, Zhang draws a small circle of applicable
articles. For him, this is not simply a technical discussion on the judicial application
of constitutional precepts; rather, it is primarily an attempt to eliminate others' fear of
difficulty in the face of the globalization of judicial review.
     In contrast, Gao Quanxi denies the possibility of judicial review in the current


1. Associate Professor, Peking University Law School.

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