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Talons and teeth : county clerks and runners in the Qing Dynasty / Bradly W. Reed.

By: Series: Law, society, and culture in ChinaPublication details: Stanford, Calif. : Stanford University Press, c2000.Description: xxiii, 318 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 0804737584 (cloth : alk. paper)
  • 9780804737586 (cloth : alk. paper)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 352.14/0951 21
LOC classification:
  • JS7352.A2 R44 2000
Contents:
Illicit Bureaucrats -- Clerks -- Families, Friends, and Factions -- Runners -- Illicit Allies and the Magistrate's Men -- The Economics of Justice -- The Legitimacy of the Indispensable -- Administrative Duties of Clerical Offices in the Ba County Yamen -- The Jins of Ba County -- Clerical Agreement on Mutual Support and the Dispensation of Legal Case Assignments -- Case Fees and Three Fees Regulations -- Division of Case Jurisdiction -- District Runner Agreement on the Division of Cases.
Review: "During the Qing dynasty, the agents of the imperial state with the greatest immediate power over the lives of commoners were not the eniperor's appointed officials. Rather, they were the clerks and runners of the county yamen, the functionaries at the very lowest level of the state's administrative hierarchy. Yet despite the critical importance of these people, until now we have known very little about them beyond the portrayals left by Qing high officials and elites, portrayals that emphasize near-universal corruption and venality.".Summary: "Drawing from the archival records of Ba county, Sichuan, Talons and Teeth challenges the simplicity of earlier, one-sided views by taking us inside the county yamen to provide the first detailed look at local administrative practice from the perspective of those who actually carried it out."--BOOK JACKET.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode
Books Books The Anton Library of Chinese Studies General Stacks JS7352.A2 R44 2000 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available Based on the author's thesis (Ph. D.--University of California, Los Angeles). TBC00004313

Based on the author's thesis (Ph. D.--University of California, Los Angeles).

Includes bibliographical references (p. [299]-306) and index.

Illicit Bureaucrats -- Clerks -- Families, Friends, and Factions -- Runners -- Illicit Allies and the Magistrate's Men -- The Economics of Justice -- The Legitimacy of the Indispensable -- Administrative Duties of Clerical Offices in the Ba County Yamen -- The Jins of Ba County -- Clerical Agreement on Mutual Support and the Dispensation of Legal Case Assignments -- Case Fees and Three Fees Regulations -- Division of Case Jurisdiction -- District Runner Agreement on the Division of Cases.

"During the Qing dynasty, the agents of the imperial state with the greatest immediate power over the lives of commoners were not the eniperor's appointed officials. Rather, they were the clerks and runners of the county yamen, the functionaries at the very lowest level of the state's administrative hierarchy. Yet despite the critical importance of these people, until now we have known very little about them beyond the portrayals left by Qing high officials and elites, portrayals that emphasize near-universal corruption and venality.".

"Drawing from the archival records of Ba county, Sichuan, Talons and Teeth challenges the simplicity of earlier, one-sided views by taking us inside the county yamen to provide the first detailed look at local administrative practice from the perspective of those who actually carried it out."--BOOK JACKET.

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