Abstract
Based on participation observations and interviews with petitioners and
petition officials in Chinese courts, this article analyzes how the
petitioning discourse is organized and how it influences the dispute
resolution process. It finds that the discourses between the petitioners and
the petition officials are mismatched. The petitioners fight to frame their
disputes in legal terms, while the petition officials use a “channeling
discourse” to divert the petitioners to legal or extralegal institutions.
The two types of discourse barely confront each other; nor are the
substantive issues seriously debated. Since being channeled into other
institutions does not resolve their disputes, petitioners start calling
their petitioning experiences as injurious, blaming officials, and making
new claims. Disputes are thus reproduced. The research sheds light on the
petitioners’ legal consciousness and the operation of the petition system in
China, and explores the contextual reasons why the phenomenon of mismatched
discourses occurs in China.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Law,General Social Sciences
Cited by
15 articles.
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