Tuesday, June 18, 2013

On the Relationship Between the Chinese Communist Party and Non-State Enterprises--Translation of CCP Central Committee Policy “Opinions on Improving and Strengthening Party Organization’s Construction in Non-SOEs (Temporary)”

The relationship between Communist Party and State has been the object of substantial work among Chinese and foreign academics.  But perhaps more interesting is the emerging relationship between the Chinese Communist Party and private enterprises operating within the parameters of Chinese socialism.  This presents not merely another facet of law with Chinese characteristics, but also another aspect of the way in which polycentricity has become more naturalized even within the domestic legal orders of strong states.


(Pix (c) Larry Catá Backer 2013)

I have posited that the old boundaries between public and private law have been giving way to new and more complex polychromatic relationships between state and other transnational enterprises, principally those operating in corporate form. (Backer, Larry Catá, "The Structure of Global Law: Fracture, Fluidity, Permeability, and Polycentricity," 17(2) Tilburg Law Review 177-199 (2012). Chinese state and Communist Party authorities have begun to act on this understanding, both in the construction of internal policy and in the development of policy for the effective intervention int he construction of mulch-sourced governance frameworks.Patrick Boehler recently reported that "Beijing has for the first time established an advisory council of multinational heavyweights to help the leadership keep a finger on the pulse of major corporations in vital industries. . . .  The mechanism will gove Bejing a platform to directly lobby influential multinational leaders across different sectors in future trade disputes."  Patrick Boehler, "Beijing Sets Up Multinationals Advisory Body," South China Morning Post, June 7, 2013.

This approach stands in marked contrast to similar efforts to leverage international softy power by Norway. (Backer, Larry Catá, Sovereign Investing and Markets-Based Transnational Legislative Power: The Norwegian Sovereign Wealth Fund in Global Markets 29 American University International Law Review – (forthcoming 2013)(November 18, 2012). Yet in both cases, the state is seeking to leverage public power through private markets.  In China, as in Norway, that leveraging involves active participation i corporate governance. While the Norwegians pursue this goal through their active shareholder policy, the CCP has deepened their policy of integrating Party work and education within corporate governance.  In this way, state and enterprise are connected seamlessly through the mediating force of the CCP, the way in which the Party stands as the nexus poiint between domestic and foreign policy. (Backer, Larry Catá and Wang, Keren, 'What is China's Dream?' Hu Angang Imagines China in 2020 as the First Internationally Embedded Superpower (February 23, 2013). Consortium for Peace & Ethics Working Paper No. 2013-2). But in the case of enterprise power within globalization, that seamlessness requires recognition of distinct governance spheres, one public and the other private.

I will be writing more about this in the context of the Chinese system in future posts.  In this introduction, I present a translation of a basic document of CCP policy--the “Opinions on Improving and Strengthening Party Organization’s Construction in Non-SOEs (Temporary)” People’s daily 2012 May 25th.

Saturday, June 01, 2013

New Paper Posted: "State and Party in the Scientific Development of a Legitimate Rule of Law Constitutional System in China: The Example of Laojiao and Shuanggui"

The City University of Hong Kong's Centre for Comparative and Chinese Law is hosting an International Conference on “The Rule of Law With Chinese Characteristics in Transition” to be held 5-7 June 2013 at the Connie Fan Multi-Media Conference Room, 4/F Chen Yick-Chi Building on the campus of CUHK.  My great thanks to the Centre's director, Dr. LIN Feng, for organizing a great conference on a very current and important project. More on the conference in a future posting.

(Pix (c) Larry Catá Backer 2013)


I will be presenting a paper at that conference, co-authored with Keren Wang, a PhD candidate at  Penn State, which we have titled "State and Party in the Scientific Development of a Legitimate Rule of Law Constitutional System in China: The Example of Laojiao and Shuanggui," which considers the constitutionality of extra-constitutional or extra-legal detentions undertaken by the state (in the case of laojiao “劳动教养”) and by the Chinese Communist Party (in the case of shuahggui "双规"). The conference draft is now available through the Social Science Research Network (SSRN) HERE and the abstract follows below. We would be grateful for comments and suggestions. 


Friday, May 31, 2013

Presentation at 2013 Annual Meeting Law and Society: Whose Crisis? Secular Liberalism, the Theocratic State and the Political Consequences of Privileging Religion for Multi-Religious States

The Law and Society Association held its 2013 Annual Meeting in Boston, Massachusetts this year.  I presented a paper, entitled, Whose Crisis? Secular Liberalism, the Theocratic State and the Political Consequences of Privileging Religion for Multi-Religious States for a panel  entitled, “An Existential Crisis for Secular Liberalism.



(Pix (c) Larry Catá Backer 2013)

My great thanks to Mark Modak Truran, Mississippi College for organizing a great panel and for leading the lively discussion.Additional contributions included The Scandal of Disenchantment within International Law, presented by John D. Haskell (Mississippi College School of Law), and The Antinomies of Religious Freedom: Reading the Egyptian Bahai Cases, presented by Peter Danchin (University of Maryland).

This post includes the abstract and short introduction to the conference draft of the paper and links to the paper.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Ruminations 49: "Society Knows What it Wants"-- Of Markets, Status Hierarchies and Knowldge Production

In his germinal text, Henry David Thoreau expressed a contradiction that is worth exploring in some detail.  He declared: the "greater part of what my neighbors call good I believe in my soul to be bad, and if I repent of anything it is very likely to be my good behavior."  (Henry David Thoreau, Walden (chp. 1 Economy) (1854)).  Yet this tension is made irrelevant by the framework within which it is confronted.  "Shams and delusions are esteemed for higher truth, while reality is fabulous. . . .By closing the eyes and slumbering, and consenting to be deceived by shows, men establish and confirm their daily life of routine, and habit everywhere, which still is built on purely illusory foundations." (Ibid., chp. 2, Where I Lived--What I Lived For). And the illusion of the foundation of life, of the basis of good and bad, is in turn reduced to irrelevance when one passes from one to another generation. Thoreau understood that "[o]ne generation abandons the enterprise of another like stranded vessels." (Henry David Thoreau, Walden (chp. 1 Economy) (1854)).

(Pix (c) Larry Catá Backer 2013)

Society knows what it wants!  The limits of knowledge are set by the desire to know certain things in certain ways; those who control the mechanics of knowledge relevance and the frame within which it is produced and interpreted, shape the way in which the possible is understood and veils the rest. The production of knowledge is commodified and disciplined through markets, like any other product.  What society knows is what it wants to know, and society always knows what it wants to know. The universe of that desire describes the totality of the reality of knowledge and its production; the rest is veiled. But the satisfaction of this demand requires an academic industry that is willing to meet the demands for knowledge that serves to meet societal needs. Thus the contradiction, knowledge exists to conform and advance intuition or to achieve an objective; knowledge production does not exist independent of the premises with which it is meant to engage.  It is only from time to time, when its essential contradictions are exposed, that one pauses, if only momentarily, to consider the character of the edifice thus constructed.  And so it is with the case of Diederik Stapel--who epitomizes all that is valuable in this framework structure, and semiotic incoherence of notions of "fraud" in the production of "useful" knowledge, when science is geared to tell people, and the institutions developed for their management, what they want to hear. Yudhijit Bhattacharjee, "The Mind of a Con Man: Diererik Stapel, a Dutch Social Psychologist, Perpetrated an Audacious Fraud by Making Up Studies That Told the World What it Wanted to Hear About Human Nature," The New York Times Magazine, April 28, 2013.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Chinese SOEs in Latin America--CSR and Culture


There has been much attention paid to the practices of Chinese multinationals, especially its State Owned Enterprises, in Africa (e.g., Lucy Corkin, "China's Emerging Multinationals in Africa," The Africa Journal, Spring 2007; Chris Alden, China in Africa: African Arguments (London: Zed Books, 2007); China Into Africa: Trade, Aid, and Influence (Robert I. Rotberg, ed., Washington, D.C.: Brookings, 2008); Párdraig Carmody, The New Scramble for Africa, Cambridge: Polity Press, 2011); Corporate Responsibility in African Development:  Insights From an Emerging Dialogue, Maya Forstater, Dr. Simon Zadek, Professor Yang Guang, Kelly Yu, Chen Xiao Hong, and Mark George, Working Paper No. 60, Harvard Kennedy School Corporate Social Responsibility Initiative, October  2010).


 (Pix (c) Larry Catá Backer 2013)


Considerably less attention has been paid to the increasingly important involvement of Chinese firms, private and state owned, in Latin American development.  I have previously suggested the U.S. emphasis on the strategic implications of China-Latin American Trade (See, Thoughts on the US-China Economic & Security Review Commission Report: China in Latin America,  Law at the End of the Day, March 5, 2012 (with useful citations)). My research assistant has prepared a general and brief preview of the issues of CSR in Chinese outbound investment in Latin America.  More to come.


Sunday, May 12, 2013

Norwegian Sovereign Wealth Fund Excludes Makers of Reconstituted Tobacco Leaf in the U.S. and China

On May 8, 2013, the Norwegian Ministry of Finance published its decision to exclude the American company Schweitzer-Mauduit International Inc. and the Chinese company Huabao International Holdings Limited from the investment universe of the Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG). The decision is based on a recommendation from the Council on Ethics for the Fund.

("Reconstituted Tobacco Leaf (RTL) was a concept pioneered by SWM and is now widely used throughout the tobacco industry for blend construction. By reclaiming remnants of virgin tobacco remaining after manufacture-elements that would otherwise be wasted-we combine them into a malleable sheet. This can then be used directly in the tobacco blend in combination with other tobacco leaf to form a very consistent and high quality cigarette blend.SWM, Reconstituted Tobacco)

While the decision would not merit much notice--the NSWF has for years  excluded companies tyhat produce tobacco form its investment universe (NSWF Ethics Guidelines Section 2, Para. 1(b)--this decision merits attention because the Ministry this time considered the applicability of this exclusion rule to reconstituted tobacco leaf.  

The Minsitry's press release is available HERE.

The Ethics Council Recommendation is available HERE.

The post reviews these documents and briefly considers its effects on both form and function of due process.  


Thursday, May 09, 2013

Xi Jinping's Constitutional Vision: Speech on the 30th Anniversary of the 1982 Constitution

In the wake of the transition of leadership in China at the end of 2012, there has been a notable amount of attention paid to issues of constitutional structure and integrity.  These movements have been met with a certain amount of wariness (cf. Carl Minzner, What Direction for Legal Reform under Xi Jinping, Jamestown Foundation, Jan. 4, 2013), and not without reason.  Moreover, it is not clear if formal expression of constitutional structures will produce functional legal reform, it is clear that senior officials are currently concerned with the constitutional system and its institutionalization along lines that can be harmonized with Chinese political ideology and global expectations of the markers of systemic legitimacy.



However, these movements are providing a clearer picture of the way in which the Chinese leadership is consolidating its view of the form of the Chinese constitutional system, and especially the constitutional relationship between the political power of the nation (residing in the Chinese Communist Party) and the administrative authority of the state.  One recent  speech by Xi Jinping merits some attention, Xi Jinping, Speech Given on the 30th Anniversary of the 1982 Constitution (Beijong, Dec. 14, 2012). 

The original and the translation (by my research assistant and Penn State  SJD candidate Shan Gao) are set out below along with some notes and annotations by Shan Gao.