Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2024
Different from “judicial repression,” stability justice targets ordinary individuals under the guise of formal judicial procedures, to maintain both social stability and governance legitimacy. Drawing on published judgments and the authors' interviews with judges and prosecutors in China, we find that, in conjunction with the gradual abandonment of traditional violent repression strategies, stability justice has been employed as an alternative tool for managing petitioning activities at the local level. Through the covertly biased application of legal rules and procedural norms, petitioners accused of threatening social stability receive longer terms of pre-trial detention, higher rates of detention before politically sensitive periods, longer custodial sentences, and fewer opportunities for probation. Our findings add new fuel to studies on comparative judicial politics and shed light on judicial behavior in contemporary China.
Yuqing Feng and Yu Zeng contribute equally to this work and are co-first authors. The authors appreciate Xin He, Lianjiang Li, Vivian Jing Zhan, Stan Hok-wui Wong, and Yue Guan for their helpful comments. They are also grateful for the comments of the editors and anonymous reviewers.
How to cite this article: Feng, Yuqing, and Yu Zeng. 2022. “Stability Justice: Petitioners versus Non-Petitioners in China's Criminal Adjudication.” Law & Society Review 56(4): 555–579. https://doi.org/10.1111/lasr.12633
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