Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T06:15:12.078Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Judicializing Environmental Politics? China's Procurator-led Public Interest Litigation against the Government

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2022

Yueduan Wang
Affiliation:
School of Government and the Institute of Public Governance, Peking University, Beijing, China; [email protected]
Ying Xia*
Affiliation:
Faculty of Law, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China
*
Corresponding author: Ying Xia, email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Scholars consider deficient local accountability mechanisms a key shortcoming of China's response to environmental issues. Through empirical analysis of the new procurator-led public interest litigation (PIL) system, this study examines whether – and to what extent – this shortcoming can be remedied by empowering the juridical institutions. It concludes that thanks to the procuratorates’ political insider status, relative autonomy from local politics and extensive resources, procurators have generally found ways to maintain a delicate balance between holding executive agencies environmentally accountable and managing local governments’ resistance to the PIL system. However, reliance on top-down political support may ultimately hinder the expansion and stability of the procuratorial PIL system.

摘要

摘要

学界普遍认为缺乏地方问责机制是中国政府环境治理的主要短板之一。通过对新设立的检察公益诉讼制度的实证研究,本文试图检验政府能否通过强化司法机构来缓解该问题。本文发现,检察公益诉讼得以在一定程度上有效平衡环境问责和政府关系,这主要得益于检察机关的政治地位、相对自主性、以及广泛的资源。但从长远来看,对高层政治支持的依赖可能会影响该制度的进一步发展和巩固。

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of SOAS University of London

Introduction

Many see China's insufficient local implementation as a key problem of its environmental governance.Footnote 1 In recent years, the people's procuratorates – once low-profile prosecutorial institutions – have rapidly become key actors in tackling this problem, thanks to their newly acquired power of public interest litigation (PIL). After a two-year pilot period, the National People's Congress formalized the PIL system by amending both the Civil Procedure Law and the Administrative Procedure Law in 2017. The authorizations include the capacity to investigate and sue both private parties and government agencies for violations against national and public interest.Footnote 2 Notably, both laws specifically list the “protection of the ecological environment and resources” first among PIL's primary aims.Footnote 3

Given their extensive geographic presence and vast state resources, procurators soon became a dominant force in legal action against environmental violations, particularly through PIL against the government. According to official records, in 2020 alone, the procuratorates officially registered and investigated 83,744 environmental PIL cases, of which 90.4 per cent were against state agencies. The report also indicates that these cases – through either pre-litigation settlement or court judgment – resulted in about 380 million yuan (US$52 million) in damages, 3.64 billion yuan (US$502 million) in restoration fees, the closure or “rectification” of 7,702 companies and the restoration of 150 square kilometres of natural land.Footnote 4 In addition, court data show that of all environmental PIL cases concluded in 2020, 97.1 per cent were brought by procuratorates and only 2.9 per cent by NGOs.Footnote 5 The Supreme People's Court (SPC) thus announced that “the procuratorates have become the ‘absolute main force’ of environmental public interest litigation, which highlights the Chinese characteristics of the public interest litigation system.”Footnote 6

Procurator-led PIL thus represents a possible way to hold China's vast local party-state environmentally accountable. If proved effective, procuratorial PIL against the government offers a potential institutionalized solution to one of the major deficiencies of the country's environmental governance. Through extensive field research, this study aims to explore the complex relationship between the procuratorates and the local party-state and to examine whether – and to what extent – the new PIL power to sue the government can help keep its environmental behaviours in check.

Accountability Deficiency and China's Quest for Centralized Environmental Governance

Scholars have identified the inability to hold local officials accountable as a key cause of China's environmental problems.Footnote 7 For instance, Gilley argues that implementation of central environmental policies in China suffers from policy incoherence and local pushbacks against central directives, concluding that the country's approach to environmentalism “is more effective in producing policy outputs than outcomes.”Footnote 8 Similarly, Eaton and Kostka's empirical work in the early 2010s discovered that China's local officials “tend to select cheap and quick approaches to environmental policy implementation.”Footnote 9 The implementation gap has been further exacerbated by the lack of accountability mechanisms other than top-down monitoring, which is often dysfunctional. Seligsohn, Liu and Zhang have found that increased local government transparency does not lead to better environmental outcomes, as the public lacks the means, such as competitive elections, to hold local governments accountable.Footnote 10

China offers a prime opportunity to examine whether these problems can be effectively mitigated, as it has recently launched wide-ranging institutional reforms to enhance environmental accountability at the local level.Footnote 11 One relatively understudied aspect of this effort is the partial judicialization of local environmental politics. Judicialization refers to “the expansion of the province of courts and judges in determining public policy outcomes” through means such as administrative review and rights jurisprudence.Footnote 12 Scholars point out that this process has been observed since the late 20th century in both established democracies like the United States and post-authoritarian European and South American states and often results from increased rights consciousness and global expansion of liberal constitutionalism.Footnote 13 However, recent studies indicate that authoritarian or hybrid regimes may also advance judicialization for various ends, including promoting trade and investment, controlling the bureaucracy and resolving the principal–agent problems between central and local governments.Footnote 14

China has followed this trend since it started establishing specialized administrative law tribunals to help rein in its vast and increasingly autonomous local party-state in 1988.Footnote 15 Xi Jinping's “law-based governance” (yifa zhiguo 依法治国) reforms are the latest examples of the state creating more local accountability – particularly in the area of environmental protection – by empowering judicial institutions. These include a series of high-profile legislative and institutional changes that have brought new actors into the field of environmental governance, such as the establishment of special environmental tribunals, NGOs’ new legal standing to bring environmental litigation and – perhaps most importantly – the formation of the procuratorial PIL system.Footnote 16

Promoting government accountability through judicialization, however, can present major challenges outside consolidated democracies. Moustafa finds that authoritarian governments may severely limit or even reverse the judicialization process due to concern that civil society actors may use the courts as a venue for challenging authoritarian rule.Footnote 17 Similarly, scholars argue that China's “turn against law” in the late 2000s was largely driven by the state's concern that courts would become a major source of social contention.Footnote 18 Another problem is local self-preservation: without the robust media and political oversight typical in established democratic systems, judges in administrative lawsuits are often under political pressure to resolve cases in favour of local agencies.Footnote 19 In the Chinese context, this problem is particularly prominent when the courts fail to secure endorsement from local Party leadership or a defendant is a powerful agency with strong political connections.Footnote 20

Procuratorial PIL has the potential to mitigate these problems. A regime may be wary of opening the judicial process to societal actors – such as NGOs and rights lawyers – as their use of the courts may pose “a credible threat to the regime's tools for maintaining control.”Footnote 21 By contrast, even with broad power to sue government agencies, state organs like the procuratorates have little incentive to challenge the regime, making procuratorial PIL a politically “safe” form of judicial empowerment and reducing the likelihood that the government will object to judicialization on political grounds. At the same time, procuratorates’ involvement in administrative lawsuits may serve to counterbalance local self-preservation. Unlike private plaintiffs, who usually have little political clout, procuratorates are major state organs that traditionally have close relationships with the courts. This makes it less likely that judges will disproportionally favour defendants in procuratorial PIL against local agencies. As juridical organs, the procuratorates are also less intertwined with the local party-state than administrative agencies and thus potentially more resistant to government interventions.

After PIL was formalized in 2017, China's highest judicial authorities promulgated a series of rules in an attempt to provide local branches with guidance and authorization to hold local agencies accountable. In 2018, the Supreme People's Procuratorate (SPP) and the SPC jointly issued the “Interpretation on Several Issues Concerning the Application of Law for Cases Regarding Procuratorial Public Interest Litigation,” which lays out the basic procedural rules for PIL. Among other things, the interpretation specifies that a procuratorate should issue a procuratorial recommendation when it finds that a government agency has acted illegally or failed to perform its duty with regard to eco-environmental protection. If an agency fails to comply with the recommendation within two months, the procuratorate can bring an administrative lawsuit against it, and the court can then rule to void, reverse or change the agency's illegal actions as well as compel the agency to discharge its legal duties. In 2021, the SPP issued the “Rules for Handling Public Interest Litigation Cases,” which address some problems associated with administrative PIL. For instance, the rules stipulate that “if an administrative agency … refuses or jeopardizes a procuratorate's investigation, the procuratorate can report to the people's congress on the same level, report to the disciplinary agency on the same level, or report to the agency's supervising authority through the higher procuratorate.”Footnote 22 However, without empirical inquiry into the inner workings of procuratorial PIL, it is difficult to assess the system's efficacy at holding local agencies accountable.

Indeed, scholars strenuously disagree on whether procuratorial PIL can effectively address China's problems with implementing environmental governance. Comparing China's procurator-led civil PIL system to its Brazilian counterpart, Shi and Van Rooij argue that the Chinese system is plagued by institutional dependence on the local party-state, inadequate expertise in specialized environmental cases and a lack of “major political change in any way comparable to the democratization processes following military rule in Brazil.”Footnote 23 Claiming that these shortcomings cause local procurators to take only easy cases with minor environmental impact, they predict that Chinese procurators “are unlikely to become a strong regulatory force.”Footnote 24 Based on case data from 2003 to 2018 and interviews with twelve procurators and judges, Ding and Xiao also find that poor competence and institutional autonomy have led local procuratorates to prefer low-hanging fruit in civil PIL.Footnote 25 Liu similarly points out that procuratorates brought less administrative PIL to court in 2019 than in 2017, attributing this to “resistance from external factors,” such as government agencies’ unwillingness to be sued.Footnote 26

In contrast, Zhai and Chang argue that its financial resources, professional staff and ability to collect evidence from government agencies “make the procuratorate the most powerful actor in public-interest litigation, which helps … when powerful enterprises or administrative agencies act as the defendant.”Footnote 27 This optimism also finds some support from Chinese empirical studies: Examining data from 287 prefecture-level cities from 2010 to 2018, Liu and Fan discovered that procuratorial PIL has effectively reduced emissions of industrial wastewater and sulphur dioxide.Footnote 28 More specifically, Shen and Xing argue that during the experimental stage of administrative PIL (2015–2017), the procuratorates had successfully compelled agencies to rectify their actions through the use of procuratorial recommendations.Footnote 29

Through one-on-one, in-depth interviews with 31 PIL procurators, this study offers the first comprehensive examination of the Chinese procurators’ role in holding local governments environmentally accountable. To mitigate potential self-serving bias, findings were corroborated by interviews with employees from five major national environmental NGOs that had worked extensively with the procuratorates on PIL-related issues. Unlike the studies by Shi and Van Rooij and Ding and Xiao, which primarily examined civil PIL against private parties, this study focuses on administrative PIL against local government agencies. These administrative cases not only represent around 90 per cent of PIL procurators’ registered cases and actual workloads but also are directly relevant to China's problems with implementing environmental policies. This article also provides a timely update to existing empirical studies on the subject; as the procuratorial PIL system was not formalized until mid-2017, earlier data likely do not reflect the system's operation beyond the initial trial-and-error period. This additional time is particularly important, as it may have allowed the procuratorates to develop expertise in environmental litigation, thereby mitigating the competence concerns raised by their critics.

The study finds that the procuratorates generally maintain a delicate balance between increasing the environmental accountability of local agencies and managing the agencies’ considerable resistance to the PIL system. Building upon the hierarchical procuratorial apparatus, PIL teams operate under a highly centralized structure, with provincial and intermediate procuratorates holding immense control over local procurators. They also benefit from endorsements from high-level central and provincial leadership, which provide crucial legislative and political leverage against the local party-state. Consequently, the procuratorates can pressure local government agencies to implement environmental laws and regulations through the threat of litigation, even though local procurators often rely on collaboration with the local party-state during PIL investigations. However, dependence on high-level support may constrain expansion of the PIL system and render it susceptible to political vicissitudes. The study thus contributes to the debate surrounding the efficacy of China's approach towards environmentalism, especially regarding its traditionally insufficient accountability mechanisms. It also adds to the growing literature on judicialization of politics in non-Western countries.

Methodology

This study is based on semi-structured interviews that the authors conducted in 2021. The fieldwork included interviews with 31 procurators from five province-level units: affluent Beijing, moderately prosperous Hubei and Shandong, and economically under-developed Jilin and Guizhou. Interviewees included seven procurators from two provincial procuratorates, 10 from three intermediate procuratorates, and 14 from seven basic procuratorates. All interviewees worked on PIL in some capacity, such as through frontline prosecution or overseeing cases. The relatively low number of interviewees per procuratorate was due to the small size of PIL teams, particularly at the basic procuratorate level.

The interview questions focused on how the procuratorates perform their newly acquired PIL function. They also addressed other relevant issues, such as relationships with local governments. The interviewees were asked to focus their answers on the period after the PIL system was formalized in 2017. The following are some typical questions:

  1. (1) Who are the people serving on your public interest litigation team?

  2. (2) How are you evaluated?

  3. (3) How do you find environmental public interest cases?

  4. (4) How do you decide whether to formally investigate a case?

  5. (5) What are the main means of investigation? How well do government agencies cooperate?

  6. (6) How does the procuratorial recommendation process work?

  7. (7) How do you decide whether to bring a public interest lawsuit to court?

  8. (8) How do you evaluate an agency's compliance with a procuratorial recommendation or court order?

  9. (9) How do you balance the procuratorate's relationships with agencies that you sue or issue procuratorial recommendations to?

These questions comprised a general interview guide for the authors. If an interviewee appeared particularly knowledgeable about or interested in a specific topic, however, the authors would encourage deeper conversation. The authors also asked follow-up questions not included in the list above. Interviews typically lasted one to two hours.

To mitigate potential self-serving bias, the authors interviewed 10 employees of five major national NGOs specializing in environmental litigation to corroborate the procurators’ accounts. Having collaborated with the procuratorates on environmental PIL cases, many employees from these organizations had substantial knowledge on the subject. Interviewees were asked to comment on the efficacy of procuratorial PIL, particularly at holding local governments environmentally accountable.

To encourage candid discussion, interviewees were promised that their names, as well as the names of their cities and counties, would not be included in any publications. The interviewees’ have thus been designated by three letters and two digits (e.g. PBJ01) according to the following method. The first letter (P or N) denotes “procurator” or “NGO employee.” The second and third letters indicate the interviewee's province (BJ=Beijing, HB=Hubei, SD=Shandong, JL=Jilin, GZ=Guizhou).

The Procuratorial PIL System: A Centralized Structure

Historically, the people's procuratorates have been centralized and hierarchical institutions. According to the Organic Law of the People's Procuratorate of the PRC, higher procuratorates “lead” the work of lower procuratorates by giving direct orders and revoking policies and decisions at will.Footnote 30 Consequently, Chinese procurators generally follow a clear chain of command from the SPP to the grassroots,Footnote 31 and the new PIL system has largely adopted this top-down structure, with higher procuratorates frequently issuing both broad policies and specific orders to local subordinates.

The four-level hierarchy

Like the rest of the people's procuratorate apparatus, the new PIL system operates under a four-level structure that gives higher procuratorates substantial control over local subordinates – an arrangement critical to the procuratorates’ ability to resist local intervention. At the top are the PIL divisions in the SPP and the provincial procuratorates, which rarely bring PIL, focusing instead on providing policy guidance to the intermediate and basic procuratorates. For example, the provincial procuratorates often issue internal policy guidance to their subordinates and use performance evaluations and other control mechanisms to induce compliance, an issue discussed in more detail in the next section.

Most case-related work is completed by PIL teams at the intermediate and basic levels. Intermediate procuratorates, whose jurisdiction usually covers a sub-provincial region or large metropolis, serve as bridges between the policy-makers in provincial procuratorates and the litigators in basic procuratorates. For instance, they are generally responsible for evaluating the basic procuratorates’ performance using criteria set by the provincial procuratorates. They also handle a relatively small number of administrative PIL cases against agencies above the county/district level. At the bottom of the hierarchy are the basic procuratorates, which bear the brunt of PIL work, including all administrative cases against grassroots agencies. This is because most of the state's day-to-day administrative functions – including environmental protection – are performed by agencies at or below the county/district level.

Besides the abovementioned division of work, the hierarchical nature of the PIL system is evident from PIL team size at each level. PIL divisions in the provincial and intermediate procuratorates average around 10 people, and usually more than half are procurators and the rest are clerks.Footnote 32 In contrast, most basic procuratorates lack dedicated PIL divisions,Footnote 33 averaging only one or two procurators dedicated to PIL work and one or two clerks or judicial police officers to assist. The structure signals a clear intention to establish a strong chain of command that can effectively turn the SPP's broad mandates into operable and localized policies on the ground.

Tools of control: performance evaluations, special projects and case instruction

Several tools are available to the higher procuratorates to rein in the PIL teams in their jurisdictions. First and foremost is the performance evaluation system. A provincial procuratorate sets the general criteria for the entire province, which form the basis for annual evaluations that pit local procuratorates against one another.Footnote 34 As these evaluations guide promotion of local procuratorate leaders, frontline procurators are generally under significant pressure to follow the provincial procuratorate's policy priorities.Footnote 35 For example, in 2019 the SPP found that the procuratorates were bringing too many “easy” PIL cases against criminally convicted individuals and called on them to bring more cases against government entities.Footnote 36 In response, the Jilin people's procuratorate increased the “point value” of administrative PIL, making it double that of PIL against convicted persons. Footnote 37 The change proved a significant incentive, as administrative PIL cases represented more than half of Jilin's total 2020 PIL count, compared to only around 20 per cent in many other provinces.Footnote 38

The provincial procuratorates also frequently announce “special projects” (zhuanxiang 专项), which are programs designed to encourage lower procuratorates to bring certain types of PIL. Examples include projects on managing medical waste and reducing plastic bag use.Footnote 39 To acquire high-level recognition and good publicity, provincial procuratorates often design such projects around either the latest Party or SPP policies or hot-button topics in the media.Footnote 40 Some intermediate procuratorates issue “sub-projects” based on these provincial projects to tailor the schemes to local conditions.Footnote 41 Local procurators generally value the extra rewards offered by special projects and thus dedicate significant time to relevant cases.

By far the most direct means of top-down control is the case approval system. Under this system, a lower procuratorate must seek approval from a higher one before making certain moves during a PIL case, such as issuing a procuratorial recommendation or bringing a lawsuit, though the exact rules differ from province to province. Through this system, higher procuratorates can directly control PIL-related political risk and reduce some principal–agent problems, such as a lower-level procuratorate conspiring with a defendant to withdraw a case.Footnote 42 As discussed later, this power becomes particularly important when a higher-level procuratorate attempts to shield PIL cases from local government interference.

In sum, like the rest of the people's procuratorate system, the four-level PIL structure is hierarchical and centralized. This is particularly true because provincial and intermediate procuratorates not only set evaluation criteria for their local subordinates but also frequently give direct instructions for individual cases. As discussed in the next sections, such a centralized structure inevitably comes into tension with the local nature of PIL cases.

Environmental PIL Cases against the Government: Navigating Local Dynamics

Like many other legal issues in China, administrative PIL cases are deeply embedded in the political dynamics of the local party-state. Studies have found that powerful local actors often try to influence the decisions of the local judiciary.Footnote 43 It is therefore reasonable to assume that procuratorial PIL will face similar resistance from localities.Footnote 44 The following section examines the complex relationships between procuratorates and local government institutions to determine how much pressure the latter can exert on PIL procurators.

Pre-litigation collaboration with the government

Collaborations with local government agencies are crucial during the pre-litigation stage of administrative PIL, which mainly involves finding case leads, identifying agencies to investigate, and conducting investigations. Interestingly, many administrative PIL cases brought by procuratorates arise through formal or informal agreements with government entities. Some procuratorates manage to establish long-term information sharing agreements with specific agencies, which help procurators identify flaws in the agencies’ official actions. One example is Hubei, where 16 government agencies have agreed to upload their internal administrative information to an online platform accessible by the procuratorates,Footnote 45 allowing procurators to browse administrative penalty decisions, including those made by environment-related agencies against polluters. When procurators suspect penalties are insufficient or otherwise ineffective, they send teams to check whether the pollution has ceased, which often reveals continued pollution and leads to PIL inquiries against the agencies.Footnote 46

Even more ironically, local government institutions sometimes ask to be investigated by the procuratorates, hoping to leverage the latter's legal authority to advance their own policy goals. For example, a district environmental protection agency in Hubei once asked the procuratorate to launch a PIL investigation against its inaction in water and soil conservation. The agency's inaction was due to a lack of political clout to compel a large university within its jurisdiction – which outranked the agency in the administrative hierarchy – to pay for water and soil conservation on its campus. Unwilling to confront the university on its own, the agency asked the procuratorate to issue a formal recommendation against its “failure” to compel the university. The agency then forwarded the recommendation to the university, explaining that it was “required by legal authority” to punish the latter for noncompliance.Footnote 47

Collaboration with the government is also vital to identifying agencies to investigate. After finding a case lead, the first step is usually determining whom the case should be against, which in theory should be the government entity responsible for the administrative action or inaction in question. Although identifying the agency behind a government act is straightforward, it is often difficult to pin down responsibility for inaction (which is the subject of most administrative PIL). This is largely because agencies’ functions overlap and the laws that allocate responsibility are often vague. For example, in a case involving pollution caused by vehicle spray-painting services, the local procuratorate found it difficult to determine whether such businesses should be regulated by environmental protection bureaus (EPBs) or transport management bureaus.Footnote 48 Under such circumstances, the relevant government entities often hold a roundtable discussion to determine the proper target of the PIL.Footnote 49 This approach, however, requires voluntary participation from these agencies, which are usually under no legal obligation to act, especially since they have not yet been formally investigated.Footnote 50

Perhaps most importantly, the procuratorates rely heavily on local agencies to collect key evidence. Many PIL cases – especially environmental ones – call for technical evidence that can only be collected through professional testing that is beyond the expertise of most procuratorates. Because commercial testing services are scarce and expensive in many areas, relevant government agencies – such as the EPBs and water authorities – are usually the local procuratorates’ primary sources of technical evidence. The agencies’ assistance on such matters, however, is largely discretionary since no national laws compel them to collaborate with the procuratorates. This gives these government institutions considerable leverage against the procuratorates, especially regarding PIL.

Collaborations with agencies like EPBs become especially necessary when a procuratorate must investigate private parties. Many interviewed procurators noted that they lack legal authority to compel private parties to comply with their investigation requests during civil and administrative PIL. Consequently, they often need help from agencies with the power to inspect private parties. For example, a district procuratorate in Jilin often asks officials from the local EPB to accompany procurators during administrative PIL investigations, so that companies cannot resist the procurators’ requests to test their production sites for air pollutants.Footnote 51

In addition, the loss of their anti-corruption bureaus has increased procuratorates’ reliance on voluntary collaborations with local agencies. Procuratorates previously held considerable power over local government institutions due to their ability to launch anti-corruption investigations, a power they often used to coerce agencies to comply with their PIL investigation requests.Footnote 52 However, procuratorates’ political status has fallen greatly since losing this anti-corruption function in the 2018 reforms that included the founding of the National Supervisory Commission (NSC), as local agencies no longer bow to their demands from fear.Footnote 53 One procurator complained that some government agencies – with which she previously had good working relations – began to give her the cold shoulder immediately after the procuratorate lost its anti-corruption branch.Footnote 54 As a result, the cooperation of such agencies increasingly hinges upon goodwill.

This situation now drives many procuratorates to seek amicable and mutually beneficial relationships with local agencies. For example, in 2021, the Hubei people's procuratorate instructed the province's procuratorates to “form win-win relationships” with these agencies.Footnote 55 A key part of the campaign was encouraging procurators to negotiate with relevant agencies to reach settlements on rectifying the latter's wrongdoings before issuing procuratorial recommendations or bringing lawsuits. According to an interviewed procurator from the Hubei people's procuratorate, the policy's objective was to facilitate collaborative communications between the procuratorates and the executive branch, which would benefit PIL practice.Footnote 56 Another example is the liaison system developed by the Jilin procuratorates, which established hotlines between procurators and key officials in government entities central to PIL work.Footnote 57 However, such win-win relationships inevitably hit their limit when it comes to administrative litigation in court.

The cost of litigation

The true test of the relationship between a procuratorate and a local environmental agency is when the former must decide whether to sue the latter in court. Upon concluding an investigation, the procuratorate issues a recommendation to the relevant government agency that details the steps it must take to rectify its alleged wrongdoing. If the agency fails to fully comply within the designated time (usually two months), the procuratorate is theoretically obligated to bring an administrative lawsuit against it.Footnote 58 In practice, however, procuratorates have substantial discretion in setting compliance deadlines and determining compliance with their recommendations, which means they often ultimately decide whether to bring lawsuits.

Such decisions are important, as, depending on local evaluation criteria and disciplinary practices, being sued by a procuratorate can spell serious trouble for a government agency. The interviewed procurators stated that they often communicate with the local court about a case's merit before and after bringing a lawsuit, thereby ensuring the judge will support their claims against the defendant agency.Footnote 59 The procuratorates’ claims in such cases are usually similar to their original procuratorial recommendations, such as requiring the defendant to re-investigate certain environmental issues or punish a particular polluter. However, the real “bite” of such litigation is not the court remedies but rather the political ramifications that come with these lawsuits. In some regions, becoming a defendant in an administrative PIL case can negatively impact an agency's performance evaluation.Footnote 60 More importantly, many local branches of the newly established NSC – which is responsible for disciplining government officials – also periodically collect information about the latest PIL cases filed in court. This causes anxiety among officials, who fear such investigation will reveal information that will prompt disciplinary action against their misbehaviour or inaction (bu zuowei 不作为).Footnote 61 Even when these serious consequences are avoided, PIL can create major public embarrassment for the government, especially since today's courts often demand that the head of a defendant agency personally appear before the judge.Footnote 62 It is thus not surprising that most local agencies are eager to avoid being sued by the procuratorates.

That being said, it should be noted that the vast majority of administrative PIL cases have not been brought to court. According to data released by the SPP, less than 1 per cent of administrative PIL investigations have ended up in litigation; most have resulted in only procuratorial recommendations.Footnote 63 However, given the procuratorates’ greater than 99 per cent PIL winning rate, the few litigation cases nonetheless serve as a “sword of Damocles” for potential defendants, placing substantial pressure on them to promptly comply with procuratorial recommendations.Footnote 64 One procurator explained:

Most agencies did not realize they might actually get sued by us until we sued them for the first time. They thought we would only issue procuratorial recommendations, so they had no idea how serious things could get. So, one time we deliberately invited the heads of various agencies’ legal departments to an open administrative PIL trial … The head of the defendant agency appeared himself and openly apologized [for the agency's wrongdoings] … That was a great educational experience. Most of the agencies that attended the trial became much more proactive in responding to our procuratorial recommendations.Footnote 65

Despite the few lawsuits, the potentially serious consequences of litigation strain procuratorates’ relationships with local environmental agencies, whose collaboration is crucial during the pre-litigation stage of PIL. Many local procurators are reluctant to bring lawsuits against these agencies, fearing that damaging these relationships will negatively impact their future investigations.Footnote 66 On this point, one Hubei basic-level procurator's experience is representative:

A few years ago, we brought a lawsuit against the water authority. They came to us in private and pleaded that we do not sue them. We did not agree, which badly offended them. For quite a long while, they did not help us test for water pollution – tests we needed as evidence in other cases. This is one reason that we do not sue the environmental protection bureau, as we need its help to test for many substances. It would cost a lot of money to hire a commercial testing company to do these tests.Footnote 67

In some types of cases, a procuratorate might even face direct interventions from the top leadership of the local Party or government systems. A typical scenario is an environmental lawsuit that may hamper local economic growth.Footnote 68 For example, a Guizhou basic procuratorate has received multiple requests from the county government to halt administrative PIL against illegal land use approvals for new businesses, as officials worry such lawsuits could scare off investments.Footnote 69 Although such interventions from the top brass of the local party-state are not common, given the Party's broad power and influence over localities, they are generally difficult for local procuratorates to resist.

To Sue or Not to Sue? How Procuratorates Try to Overcome Local Pushback

Here is the key question: can procuratorates hold local government institutions accountable for their environmental actions or lack thereof despite the local resistance? Obviously, the combination of the procuratorial PIL system's centralized structure and its reliance on the local party-state creates a political dilemma for procurators trying to decide whether to sue a local agency. From the perspective of the SPP and the provincial procuratorates, the term “public interest litigation” – as opposed to “supervision” or “mediation” – implies that lawsuits are needed to justify this newfound power and raise awareness of it within other government institutions.Footnote 70 Indeed, as mentioned previously, the SPP and some provincial procuratorates have specifically instructed local procuratorates to bring more PIL cases against government institutions. Given the top-down nature of the procuratorial system, such requests put significant pressure on local procurators to bring more lawsuits. On the other hand, the need to collaborate with government agencies – coupled with occasional interventions from the local party-state leadership – often give local procuratorates pause when weighing whether to litigate. As one basic-level procurator from Shandong summarized,

Based on the SPP's guidance, both the provincial and municipal procuratorates have recently been demanding that we bring more administrative lawsuits. This has become a major headache for us … Much of our work requires collaboration with government agencies and suing them will make such collaboration difficult.Footnote 71

Recognizing the problem, provincial and intermediate procuratorates sometimes try to mitigate this dilemma through direct intervention. One common method is to pressure local agencies by negotiating with their superiors. If a local EPB refuses to cooperate with a basic procuratorate during a PIL investigation, for example, the intermediate procuratorate can ask the prefectural EPB to instruct it to comply with the investigation request.Footnote 72 In some cases, a provincial procuratorate may contact province-level government institutions to increase the pressure on local agencies to collaborate.Footnote 73

Another form of intervention is case reassignment. According to SPP guidelines, a higher procuratorate can reassign a PIL case from one lower procuratorate under its jurisdiction to another or to itself “based on what is needed to handle the case.”Footnote 74 Pursuant to this rule, intermediate procuratorates sometimes reassign administrative PIL cases that raise serious concerns about local intervention from one basic procuratorate to another.Footnote 75 In more significant cases, a higher procuratorate might decide to take the matter into its own hands. One procurator from an intermediate procuratorate said:

[Some officials] might be really upset [about an administrative PIL case], in which case they might try to influence our local procuratorates. If there is too much pressure, we will go there and personally work on the case. Since [the local governments] have little prior relationship with us, pushing the case through becomes easier.Footnote 76

By far the most effective way for a procuratorate to overcome this dilemma is to obtain political support from the provincial Party apparatus. According to an environmental NGO lawyer with high-level government connections, such support has come at least partly from deliberate lobbying by the SPP:

Initially, the local procuratorates were cautious and afraid of offending the local governments. The SPP then sent its own PIL team to some provinces to talk with the governors and provincial party secretaries, asking them to work with the local procuratorates and promise to never blame them [for suing local governments]. Only after that did the procuratorates begin to act increasingly boldly [in environmental PIL cases].Footnote 77

This kind of endorsement can prompt the provincial congresses to pass legislation that offers local procuratorates legitimacy to deal with the local party-state.Footnote 78 For instance, after the Jilin Party committee became the first provincial Party authority to formally endorse procuratorial PIL, the Jilin people's congress soon thereafter issued the “Decision to Strengthen Procuratorial Public Interest Litigation” in 2019.Footnote 79 This local legislation requires all agencies to cooperate with PIL investigations and comply with procuratorial recommendations and encourages local governments to include procuratorate collaboration in their officials’ performance evaluations. It also stipulates that all courts in the province must proactively enforce PIL judgments.Footnote 80 Although this legislation is not always enforced in practice, procurators often use it as a bargaining chip when negotiating with local actors.Footnote 81

Perhaps more importantly, support from the provincial Party leadership boosts a procuratorate's political status, enabling it to take a firmer stance against the local party-state. Interviewed procurators in Jilin often credited the provincial Party committee's political endorsement with their high number of environmental PIL compared to other provinces.Footnote 82 One way the procuratorates leverage such endorsement is by reporting agencies that refuse to collaborate with them to the committee, thereby forcing these agencies to comply with their requests.Footnote 83 Similarly, support from provincial Party leadership helps a procuratorate resist intervention from local governments. For example, a basic-level procurator from Jilin reported that it recently disregarded the municipal government's request to suspend certain environmental PIL, choosing to nonetheless bring the lawsuits “because we have already spent a lot on the evidence.”Footnote 84 Furthermore, backing from a Party committee emboldens a procuratorate to use confrontational tactics during administrative PIL, such as inviting new media to report on a case.Footnote 85 Some may even exert pressure on particularly unruly government entities by holding public hearings that include local congress members and journalists.Footnote 86

On the other hand, absent strong political support from provincial leadership, a procuratorate may find it difficult to resist pressure from local governments in certain types of administrative PIL. For example, in the previously mentioned case in which local leadership pressed a basic procuratorate to drop cases against illegal land use approvals, the Guizhou provincial procuratorate folded, instructing the local procuratorate to abandon the cases and not bring similar lawsuits in the future.Footnote 87 Such examples, which contrast starkly with the experiences of the Jilin procurators, showcase the key role of provincial leadership in shielding administrative PIL from local intervention.

However, despite the difficulty of bringing lawsuits in court, procuratorial PIL work has substantially impacted local governments’ compliance with environmental laws. Across provinces, interviewed procurators reported experiencing significant changes in environmental agencies’ interactions with them after the PIL system was established. Initially, many agencies treated these procurators with either contempt or extreme caution, as they were unsure how the procuratorate would wield its new power.Footnote 88 It was not until the first local PIL lawsuits were brought and the agencies became better acquainted with the procurators that the two began to work closely together. Although such collaboration has made suing the agencies more difficult, it has also made the agencies more aware of the legal risks of their actions (or inaction). The interviewed procurators generally agreed that the environmental agencies they frequently worked with had become more law-abiding and quicker to comply with their recommendations – an outcome that has ironically made their jobs harder because there are fewer causes to litigate.Footnote 89 This effect has been strengthened by the so-called “looking back” (huitou kan 回头看) mechanism, which requires procurators to periodically conduct post-PIL checks on agencies that have received procuratorial recommendations. If an agency's compliance is found to lapse, the procuratorate will immediately relaunch a full PIL investigation.Footnote 90 Even in cases of interference by local leadership, the interfering officials typically will eventually push for compliance with procuratorial recommendations if the procurator promises not to sue.Footnote 91

Discussion and Conclusion

As demonstrated above, the procuratorial PIL system has generally found ways to balance its quest to hold local agencies environmentally accountable and its reliance on government collaboration during the pre-litigation stage. The foundation for resisting local intervention is embedded in the PIL system's centralized structure. The new PIL teams have largely inherited the hierarchical structure of the procuratorial apparatus. More specifically, higher procuratorates can assert a great deal of control over local PIL teams through various mechanisms, including performance evaluations, special projects and the case approval system.

This centralized structure is most seriously tested when it encounters environmental PIL cases against local governments. Procurators need help from local agencies with many pre-litigation tasks – from identifying agencies that warrant investigation to testing pollutant samples. In particular, procuratorates rely heavily on local environmental protection agencies, such as the EPBs and water authorities, to provide substance-testing expertise and the legal authority to investigate private companies. Such reliance has been further exacerbated by the procuratorates’ loss of their anti-corruption function in 2018, which has deprived procurators of an important channel for compelling local agencies. This has created a dilemma for local procurators, who are under top-down pressure to investigate and sue the same agencies they frequently work with for violations and inaction related to the environment.

In practice, procuratorates are generally able to mitigate – though not completely overcome – this dilemma thanks to a combination of internal top-down intervention and external political endorsement. When a PIL case is at risk of local interference, a higher-level procuratorate can reassign the case to another local procuratorate or to itself, thus decreasing the local government's ability to influence the litigation process. In some regions, high-level political support, such as an official endorsement by the provincial Party leadership, may also alleviate pressure from the local party-state. Such endorsement not only nudges the provincial congress to pass pro-PIL legislation but also raises a procuratorate's political status, allowing it to take a more confrontational approach towards local agencies on environmental issues. Though the vast majority of administrative PIL investigations only end up in procuratorial recommendations rather than lawsuits, the mere threat of litigations – which may lower performance evaluations or even prompt disciplinary actions – still impose substantial pressure on local agencies to promptly implement the procuratorates’ recommendations.

The procuratorial PIL system thus offers an example of how a state can mitigate its implementation problems through the process of judicialization. The hierarchical and professional nature of the juridical institutions gives them a unique advantage against – though not immunity from – illegitimate local interference.Footnote 92 Courts and procuratorates are generally less embedded in the local power complex than most executive agencies because they are legally and administratively obligated to follow national laws as interpreted by their superiors. This is especially true for the procuratorial PIL system, as its hierarchical structure enables the higher procuratorates to practically micromanage their local subordinates, making it difficult for local actors to leverage political or personal connections to avoid environmental accountability. This structural advantage is particularly pronounced when coupled with high-level political backing, such as national legislation and endorsements by provincial leadership. Such support emboldens the juridical institutions when dealing with local governments and can transform legal outcomes into political consequences for violators.

The role of judicialization in environmental governance is especially prominent in regimes that lack non-government means for holding local governments accountable. In established democracies, robust public participation – largely through elections and civil society – provides substantial checks on officials’ environmental behaviours. These types of accountability mechanisms, however, are often absent in more closed polities. Although such states sometimes tolerate or even encourage NGOs’ involvement in local environmental governance, such participation is usually cautious, piecemeal and restricted in terms of formality and subject matter.Footnote 93 Indeed, that NGOs are authorized by law to bring PIL against private parties but not government agencies demonstrates the limits of civil society to enhance the environmental accountability of the local party-state.Footnote 94 Juridical institutions, such as courts and procuratorates, are thus among the few actors that possess some degree of autonomy from local governments as well as the capacity to hold them accountable.

This article also has broader implications for studying judicialization beyond consolidated democracies. Scholars point out that a major obstacle to judicialization is some regimes’ concern that civil society actors might use the courts to challenge their rule.Footnote 95 The findings of this study suggest that a government might have it both ways by permitting state-controlled institutions – rather than societal actors – to bring lawsuits the state deems politically risky. This approach allows the state to realize the functional potential of judicialization while minimizing its associated political risks. Indeed, that some provincial party leaderships have actively endorsed procuratorial PIL illustrates the regime's comfort with utilizing such state-centred forms of judicialization. In addition, involving state institutions like the procuratorates brings human, financial and political resources unavailable to civil society groups, such as legal professionals in every county and connections with judges and provincial leaderships.Footnote 96 These advantages vastly accelerate the judicialization process in certain policy areas, in terms of both case volume and geographic reach. They may also enable the state to mitigate local self-preservation by counterbalancing local actors’ influence over the courts.

That being said, as its influence continues to grow, procuratorial administrative PIL will likely be increasingly constrained by the procuratorates’ status as state organs. As indicated by several interviewed NGO employees, though the procuratorates have been relatively successful at leveraging their resources and connections to enhance the environmental accountability of local agencies, procurators remain cautious and selective in bringing administrative lawsuits due to their political-insider status. The interviewees thus expressed concern that local procuratorates would hesitate to tackle fundamental problems in China's environmental governance, as it could require challenging powerful and high-level state institutions.Footnote 97 This dilemma is likely to become particularly pronounced given the SPP's continuous quest for institutional legitimacy and political relevance, which has increased top-down demand for high-impact administrative PIL. This ambition will inevitably hit its political limit when it clashes with key interests of the local or provincial party-state, whose support remains crucial to the functioning of the procuratorates.

Moreover, the procuratorial PIL system's heavy dependence on high-level political endorsement sheds doubt on both the universality of the judicialization approach and its sustainability in the Chinese scenario. The strength and availability of political backing for the judicialization of environmental politics hinges upon the policy priorities and power dynamics of the national leadership. For example, a similar process during the Hu Jintao era, which saw the courts playing an increasing role through pollution compensation lawsuits, yielded only marginal and inconsistent results.Footnote 98 This was due in no small part to the political fragmentation that prevented the administration from effectively reining in the local party-state and offering sufficient support to the courts – even if it intended to.Footnote 99 In contrast, the current Chinese administration has not only demonstrated considerable commitment to both protecting the environment and strengthening legal institutions but also proved highly effective in consolidating power within both the central government and centre–local relations.Footnote 100 This combination of political priority and efficacy has been critical in developing political backing for procuratorates – and, arguably, the massive PIL apparatus itself. It is therefore questionable whether – or to what extent – such pro-environment judicialization could be replicated by other polities. Indeed, considering the vicissitudes of factional politics and centre–local relations in the past decades, it remains unclear whether the relative effectiveness of the Chinese procuratorial PIL system will be sustained in the long term.

Acknowledgements

We are very grateful to the many anonymous procurators who candidly shared their opinions and the three anonymous professors who generously helped us to arrange the interviews. The study has benefited from the helpful comments of He Xin, Yang Lihua, Liu Yuchen, the participants of the Young Scholars Workshop of Peking University School of Government, two anonymous referees and the editors at The China Quarterly. The research project is generously supported by the National Social Science Fund of China (grant no. 22CZZ003). All errors remain our own.

Conflicts of interest

None

Yueduan WANG is an assistant professor in the School of Government and the Institute of Public Governance at Peking University. His research focuses on the interdisciplinary area between politics and law, including comparative judicial politics and illiberal/authoritarian constitutions.

Ying XIA is an assistant professor in the Faculty of Law of the University of Hong Kong. Her research interest includes environmental law, international law and law and public policy, with a focus on experience from developing countries.

Footnotes

2 Civil Procedure Law of the PRC, Article 55, available at: http://www.npc.gov.cn/zgrdw/englishnpc/Law/2007-12/12/content_1383880.htm; Administrative Procedure Law of the PRC, Article 25, available at: http://www.npc.gov.cn/zgrdw/englishnpc/Law/2007-12/12/content_1383912.htm.

3 Other enumerated areas include food and drug safety, protection of state-owned property and the assignment of the right to use state-owned land.

4 SPP 2021a.

5 The procuratorates brought 3,454 environmental PIL cases, while the NGOs brought 103 cases.

6 SPC 2021.

8 Gilley Reference Gilley2012, 287.

9 Eaton and Kostka Reference Eaton and Kostka2014, 378.

10 Seligsohn, Liu and Zhang Reference Seligsohn, Liu and Zhang2018.

16 Van Rooij, Stern and Fürst Reference Van Rooij, Stern and Fürst2016.

21 Moustafa Reference Moustafa2003, 925.

22 SPP 2021b.

23 Shi and Van Rooij Reference Shi and van Rooij2016, 47.

24 Footnote Ibid., 54.

25 Ding and Xiao Reference Ding and Xiao2021.

27 Zhai and Chang Reference Zhai and Chang2018, 380.

29 Shen and Xing Reference Shen and Xing2017.

30 Organic Law of the People's Procuratorates of the PRC, Article 10, Article 24, available at: http://www.npc.gov.cn/zgrdw/englishnpc/Law/2007-12/13/content_1384077.htm.

31 Interview with PHB08.

32 Interviews with PBJ01, PLJ07, PHB04, PSD01.

33 Interviews with PSD02, PHB08, PLJ05, PGZ01.

34 Interviews with PSD02, PLJ01.

35 Interview with PSD02.

36 Jun Zhang Reference Zhang2019.

37 Interview with PJL01.

38 Interviews with PJL01, PSD01.

39 Interviews with PJL04, PHB09.

40 Interview with PHB02.

41 Interview with PJL04.

42 Interview with PHB06.

44 Shi and Van Rooij Reference Shi and van Rooij2016, 46.

45 Interview with PHB20.

46 Interview with PHB11.

47 Interview with PHB09.

48 Interview with PJL05.

49 Interviews with PHB08, PSD02.

50 Interview with PSD02.

51 Interview with PJL05.

52 Interviews with PJL04, PHB02.

53 Interviews with PJL04, PHB02.

54 Interview with PHB02.

55 Interview with PHB02.

56 Interview with PHB02.

57 Interview with PJL04.

58 SPP 2021b.

59 Interviews with PHB11, PJL01.

60 Interviews with PSD01, PJL05, PBJ01.

61 Interview with PLJ06.

62 Interviews with PHB06, PSD01.

63 SPP 2019.

65 Interview with PHB06.

66 Interviews with PBJ01, PSD01.

67 Interview with PHB08.

68 Interviews with PJL05, PGZ03.

69 Interview with PGZ03.

70 Interview with PHB02.

71 Interview with PSD02.

72 Interviews with PHB04, PBJ01.

73 Interview with PBJ01.

74 SPP 2021b.

75 Interview with PSD02.

76 Interview with PJL07.

77 Interview with NBJ02.

78 Interviews with PHB02, PJL04.

79 Interview with PJL02.

80 SPP 2019.

81 Interview with PLJ02.

82 Interviews with PJL01, PLJ02.

83 Interview with PJL02.

84 Interview with PJL05.

85 Interviews with PLJ04, PJL08.

86 Interview with PJL08.

87 Interview with PGZ03.

88 Interviews with PHB11, PJL08.

89 Interviews with PJL06, PBJ01.

90 Interview with PHB10.

91 Interview with PGZ03.

94 Interview with NBJ01.

96 Interviews with NGZ03, NBJ02.

97 Interviews with NGZ03, NBJ01.

References

Dai, Jingyun, and Spires, Anthony J.. 2018. “Advocacy in an authoritarian state: how grassroots environmental NGOs influence local governments in China.China Journal 79 (1), 6283.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ding, Chunyan, and Xiao, Huina. 2021. “A paper tiger? Procuratorial regulators in China's civil environmental public interest litigations.Fordham Environmental Law Review 32, 323379.Google Scholar
Eaton, Sarah, and Kostka, Genia. 2014. “Authoritarian environmentalism undermined? Local leaders’ time horizons and environmental policy implementation in China.China Quarterly 218, 359380.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferejohn, John. 2002. “Judicializing politics, politicizing law.Law and Contemporary Problems 65 (3), 4168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gilley, Bruce. 2012. “Authoritarian environmentalism and China's response to climate change.Environmental Politics 21 (2), 287307.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ginsburg, Tom, and Moustafa, Tamir. 2008. Rule by Law: The Politics of Courts in Authoritarian Regimes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
He, Xin. 2013. “Judicial innovation and local politics: judicialization of administrative governance in east China.China Journal 69, 2042.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
He, Xin. 2020. “Pressures on Chinese judges under Xi.” China Journal 85. DOI: 10.1086/711751.Google Scholar
Hirschl, Ran. 2008. “The judicialization of mega-politics and the rise of political courts.Annual Review of Political Science 11 (1), 93118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hirschl, Ran. 2011. “The judicialization of politics.” In Goodin, Robert E. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Political Science. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 253274.Google Scholar
Kostka, Genia, and Nahm, Jonas. 2017. “Central–local relations: recentralization and environmental governance in China.China Quarterly 231, 567582.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kostka, Genia, and Zhang, Chunman. 2018. “Tightening the grip: environmental governance under Xi Jinping.” Environmental Politics 27 (5), 769–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, Ling. 2012. “The ‘production’ of corruption in China's courts: judicial politics and decision making in a one-party state.Law & Social Inquiry 37 (4), 848877.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Li, Xiaoliang, Yang, Xiaojin, Wei, Qi and Zhang, Bing. 2019. “Authoritarian environmentalism and environmental policy implementation in China.Resources, Conservation and Recycling 145, 8693.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liebman, Benjamin L. 2014. “Legal reform: China's law-stability paradox.Daedalus 143 (2), 96109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liu, We, and Fan, Wenyu. 2021. “Gongyi susong tisheng le chengshi de huanjing zhili jixiao ma? Jiyu 287 ge dijishi weiguan shuju de shizheng yanjiu” (Does public interest litigation promote the performance of urban environmental governance? An empirical study based on micro-data of 287 prefecture-level cities). Shanghai caijing daxue xuebao 23 (4), 4862.Google Scholar
Liu, Yi. 2020. “Woguo jiancha gongyi susong zhidu de fazhan taishi yu zhidu wanshan: jiyu 2017–2019 nian shuju de shizheng fenxi” (The development and improvement of public interest litigation by procuratorate in China: an empirical analysis based on related data from 2017 to 2019). Chongqing daxue xuebao (shehui kexue ban) 4, 173183.Google Scholar
Mertha, Andrew. 2009. “‘Fragmented authoritarianism 2.0’: political pluralization in the Chinese policy process.China Quarterly 200, 9951012.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Minzner, Carl F. 2011. “China's turn against law.American Journal of Comparative Law 59 (4), 935984.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moustafa, Tamir. 2003. “Law versus the state: the judicialization of politics in Egypt.Law & Social Inquiry 28 (4), 883930.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moustafa, Tamir. 2007. The Struggle for Constitutional Power: Law, Politics, and Economic Development in Egypt. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moustafa, Tamir. 2014. “Law and courts in authoritarian regimes.Annual Review of Law and Social Science 10, 281299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ng, Kwai Hang, and He, Xin. 2017. Embedded Courts: Judicial Decision-making in China. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peerenboom, Randall. 2002. China's Long March toward Rule of Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seligsohn, Deborah, Liu, Mengdi and Zhang, Bing. 2018. “The sound of one hand clapping: transparency without accountability.Environmental Politics 27 (5), 804829.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shi, Yifan, and van Rooij, Benjamin. 2016. “Procuratorial regulation in the Global South: environmental civil litigation by procurators in China compared to Brazil.Regulation & Governance 10 (1), 4457.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shen, Kaiju, and Xing, Xin. 2017. “Jiancha jiguan tiqi xingzheng gongyi susong suqian chengxu shizheng yanjiu” (Study on pre-trial procedure of procuratorial organ initiating an administrative public interest litigation). Xingzheng faxue yanjiu 5, 3951.Google Scholar
Sieder, Rachel, Schjolden, Line and Angell, Alan. 2016. The Judicialization of Politics in Latin America. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Solomon, Peter H. 2007. “Informal practices in Russian justice: probing the limits of post-Soviet reform.” In Feldbrugge, Ferdinand (ed.), Russia, Europe, and the Rule of Law. Leiden: Brill, 7991CrossRefGoogle Scholar
SPC (Supreme People's Court of the PRC). 2021. “Zhongguo huanjing sifa fazhan baogao 2020” (Report on the Development of China's Environmental Justice 2020). 4 June. http://www.court.gov.cn/zixun-xiangqing-307461.html.Google Scholar
SPP (Supreme People's Procuratorate of PRC). 2019. “Jilin sheng renmin daibiao dahui changwu weiyuanhui guanyu jiaqiang jiancha jiguan gongyi susong gongzuo de jueding” (Jilin People's Congress's decision to strengthen procuratorial public interest litigation). 12 December. https://www.spp.gov.cn/spp/gyssshmhsh/201912/t20191202_440074.shtml.Google Scholar
SPP. 2021a. “2020 nian quanguo jiancha jiguan zhuyao ban'an shuju” (Key case data of procuratorates in 2020). 8 March. https://www.spp.gov.cn/spp/xwfbh/wsfbt/202103/t20210308_511343.shtml#1.Google Scholar
SPP. 2021b. “Zuigao jian gongbu ‘Renmin jianchayuan gongyi susong ban'an guize’” (Rules for the handling of public interest litigation cases by people's procuratorates). 14 July. https://www.spp.gov.cn/spp/xwfbh/wsfbh/202107/t20210714_523809.shtml.Google Scholar
Stern, Rachel. 2010. “On the frontlines: making decisions in Chinese civil environmental lawsuits.Law & Policy 32 (1), 79103.Google Scholar
Teets, Jessica C. 2014. Civil Society under Authoritarianism: The China Model. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Rooij, Benjamin, Stern, Rachel E. and Fürst, Kathinka. 2016. “The authoritarian logic of regulatory pluralism: understanding China's new environmental actors.Regulation & Governance 10 (1), 313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Rooij, Benjamin, Zhu, Qiaoqiao, Na, Li and Qiliang, Wang. 2017. “Centralizing trends and pollution law enforcement in China.China Quarterly 231, 583606.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, Yueduan. 2020. “Preempting court–civil society synergy: how China balances judicial autonomy and legal activism.” Hong Kong Law Journal 49 (3). https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3707630.Google Scholar
Xu, Tong. 2021. “The selective centralization in decentralization: China's environmental vertical management reform with a case study in Hebei province.International Journal of Water Resources Development 38 (4), 634657.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhai, Tiantian, and Chang, Yen-Chiang. 2018. “Standing of environmental public-interest litigants in China: evolution, obstacles and solutions.Journal of Environmental Law 30 (3), 369397.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhang, Jun. 2019. “Zuigao renmin jianchayuan guanyu kaizhan gongyi susong jiancha gongzuo qingkuang de baogao” (The Supreme People Procuratorate's report on the condition of the public interest litigation work). 24 October. https://www.spp.gov.cn/spp/tt/201910/t20191024_435925.shtml.Google Scholar
Zhang, Xuehua. 2017. “Implementation of pollution control targets in China: has a centralized enforcement approach worked?China Quarterly 231, 749774.CrossRefGoogle Scholar