04469nam 2200553 450 991046056990332120200520144314.094-6274-466-1(CKB)3710000000577191(EBL)4354200(MiAaPQ)EBC4354200(Au-PeEL)EBL4354200(CaPaEBR)ebr11149442(CaONFJC)MIL910421(OCoLC)936882259(EXLCZ)99371000000057719120160209h20162016 uy 0engur|n|---|||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierTransformation of the law on farmland transfer in China /Linlin LiThe Hague, The Netherlands :Eleven International Publishing,2016.©20161 online resource (415 p.)Description based upon print version of record.94-6236-645-4 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Table of contents; Abbreviations; List of Figures; List of Tables; 1 Introduction; 1.1 The strict government regulation of collective land use in China; 1.2 Government intervention in farmland transfer process; 1.3 A debate on Chinese farmers' empowerment and participation; 1.4 Approaches involved in this research; 1.5 Research questions and the methodology; 1.6 Why the principle of proportionality cannot be used in thisresearch?; 1.7 Structure of my research; 2 A governance perspective in the regulated farmland transfersystem; 2.1 Property rights and their transferability2.1.1 What is a property right?2.1.2 Property rights in common law and civil law system; 2.1.3 Transferability of property rights; 2.2 Delineation of property rights in land; 2.2.1 Long history of the ownership of private property; 2.2.2 Restrictions on property rights and its transferability in private law; 2.2.3 Delineation of the property rights to the use of farmland; 2.3 Rationales for public control over farmland transfer; 2.3.1 Reasons for the intensification of public control over land use; 2.3.2 Regulation of land use through land administration in modern states2.3.3 Government vs. market in the regulation of farmland transfer2.3.4 Variables in balancing private rights and government regulation infarmland transfer; 2.3.5 The need for good governance in land administration; 2.4 Governance as a new development of government regulation; 2.4.1 A three-level understanding of governance; 2.4.2 Governance in legal research; 2.5 A balanced government regulation from a governance perspective; 2.5.1 A viable way of realizing good/balanced governance; 2.5.2 A balanced governance structure for land use and transfer; 2.6 Concluding remarks3 Reform of collective land ownership and farmland transfer in China3.1 Evolution of the rural land ownership in China; 3.1.1 Pre-1949 rural land law reforms by the communists; 3.1.2 Changes of rural land ownership from 1949 to 1978; 3.1.3 Evolution of the collective land ownership under the HRS; 3.1.4 State-controlled collective land ownership; 3.2 Limitations of the collective land ownership under the HRS; 3.2.1 Contradiction between the collective system and the HRS; 3.2.2 Who should be the legal representative of collective ownership?3.2.3 Interventions of collective ownership to farmers' land rights3.3 A quasi-private land use right of individual farmers; 3.3.1 Debate on the nature of the FUR; 3.3.2 Is the FUR a perpetual usufruct?; 3.3.3 A perpetual FUR in law; 3.4 Redefined collective ownership based on divided co-ownership; 3.4.1 Connection between the collective land ownership and dividedco-ownership; 3.4.2 Experiments of the joint-stock cooperative reform of collectives; 3.4.3 Lessons learned from this joint-stock cooperative system reform; 3.5 A further clarification of the collective ownership and the FUR3.5.1 Conflicts between the divided co-ownership of collective land and theFURCivil lawChinaLand reformChinaElectronic books.Civil lawLand reform346.51Li Linlin889685MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910460569903321Transformation of the law on farmland transfer in China1987807UNINA