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Journal for Legal History Studies

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The Status and Rights of Women during the process of Civil Litigation in Qing Dynasty

  • Author:

    A, Feng

  • Page Number:

    11:61-106

  • Date:

    2007/06

  • Cite Download

Abstract

The paper first examines the changing regulations regarding women's status in civil litigation from the Tang and Song periods to  the  Ming  and Qing  periods. Secondly, using judgments litigation documents from Qing periods, the paper investigates the role  of  women as   plaintiffs  and defendants  in  the litigation process.

Keywords

Qing Dynasty, civil litigation, women’s status

Cite

Citations are generated automatically from bibliographic data as a convenience, and may not be complete or accurate.

Citation Text

Footnote
Feng A, “The Status and Rights of Women during the process of Civil Litigation in Qing Dynasty,” Journal for Legal History Studies 11 (2007): 61-106.

Bibliography
A, Feng
2007 “The Status and Rights of Women during the process of Civil Litigation in Qing Dynasty.” Journal for Legal History Studies 11: 61-106.
A, Feng. (2007). The Status and Rights of Women during the process of Civil Litigation in Qing Dynasty. Journal for Legal History Studies, 11, 61-106.
A, Feng. “The Status and Rights of Women during the process of Civil Litigation in Qing Dynasty.” Journal for Legal History Studies, no. 11 (2007): 61-106.
A, Feng. “The Status and Rights of Women during the process of Civil Litigation in Qing Dynasty.” Journal for Legal History Studies, no. 11, 2007, pp. 61-106.
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