
Contents
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The Start of CCP War Crimes Investigations The Start of CCP War Crimes Investigations
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On the Road to PRC War Crimes Trials On the Road to PRC War Crimes Trials
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On the Eve of the Trials of Japanese War Criminals On the Eve of the Trials of Japanese War Criminals
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Confessions Confessions
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Confessions of a Kind Confessions of a Kind
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The Case against Sumioka Giichi The Case against Sumioka Giichi
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Problems with This Format of Justice? Problems with This Format of Justice?
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The End of Justice? The End of Justice?
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8 Creating a Theater of Law in Mao’s China
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Published:March 2024
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Abstract
This chapter explains that Mao Zedong announced the establishment of the People's Republic of China and simultaneously annulled all the Chinese Nationalist laws. Fundamentally, Communist ideology conceives of itself essentially as pursuing what the Soviets termed people's justice, which stressed the class nature of law deemed secondary to political goals. The chapter provides an overview of the efforts of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to study and investigate war crimes. The CCP trials reformed Japanese war criminals while also offering forms of justice to the Chinese public for crimes unrecognized amidst the KMT regime. The chapter explains the consequences of using confessions to provide insight into the sort of justice the CCP believed it was pursuing.
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