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The Further Study of the Final Jurisdiction power in Tibet during the Qing Dynasty

  • Author:

    Yuan, Jian

  • Page Number:

    14:109-138

  • Date:

    2008/12

  • Cite Download

Abstract

This paper proceeds from some special characters of the Qing Dynasty’s legal space and concludes the informed research of the final adjudication power in Tibet of the Qing Dynasty, and then analyses the religious leaders such as Dalai Lama and Panchen, the Kashag, the Lifanyuan and the grand minister resident of Tibet in the context of the political history in Qing Tibet, and finally tries to construct a “network” which can more clearly answer to this topic. In the conclusion the author point out that we must strictly distinguish the “right of adjudication” and“sovereignty” in Tibet of the Qing Dynasty. In Qing China in general, the Tibet-Zone held the final adjudication power in civil and criminal cases but lost this power in administrative cases, and the Qing central government held the final adjudication power in administrative cases.

Keywords

Qing Dynasty、Tibet、Judicature、The final adjudication power、Locality

Cite

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

Citation Text

Footnote
Jian Yuan, “The Further Study of the Final Jurisdiction power in Tibet during the Qing Dynasty,” Journal for Legal History Studies 14 (2008): 109-138.

Bibliography
Yuan, Jian
2008 “The Further Study of the Final Jurisdiction power in Tibet during the Qing Dynasty.” Journal for Legal History Studies 14: 109-138.
Yuan, Jian. (2008). The Further Study of the Final Jurisdiction power in Tibet during the Qing Dynasty. Journal for Legal History Studies, 14, 109-138.
Yuan, Jian. “The Further Study of the Final Jurisdiction power in Tibet during the Qing Dynasty.” Journal for Legal History Studies, no. 14 (2008): 109-138.
Yuan, Jian. “The Further Study of the Final Jurisdiction power in Tibet during the Qing Dynasty.” Journal for Legal History Studies, no. 14, 2008, pp. 109-138.
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