The Ministry of Justice attached great importance to the application of smart technology in recent years as it built a big data-based smart platform and system, established an emergency command system for judicial administration, substantially improved its ability to ensure cybersecurity, and formed up a general framework of digital rule of law coupled with smart justice.
Since 2014, He Jinfang has been working as a dedicated lawyer at the legal aid center of Funing county in East China's Jiangsu province, helping people in financial difficulties face-to-face through a small window.
Beijing's judicial department has opened a green channel for personnel who fought at the front line during the battle against COVID-19, providing them with speedy legal aid services.
As part of its effort to eradicate poverty within its jurisdiction, the city of Liuzhou in South China's Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region recently dispatched a public legal service team to one of its impoverished villages where professionals would try to address villagers' various legal concerns.
In recent years, under the leadership of the provincial judicial department, lawyers in Chongqing, a southwestern mountainous megacity, have been devoting themselves to the critical battle against poverty, teaming up to provide impoverished areas with various legal services.
In May 2019, the Ministry of Justice (MOJ) launched a pilot program of notification and commitment in 13 provincial-level regions and five ministries.
China has made progress in the building of a smart justice system, the Ministry of Justice said on Jun 8.
Chinese national political advisers convened a bi-weekly seminar on Jun 5 to discuss revising the administrative reconsideration law.
China's national lawyers association has launched supportive projects to help and promote the development of the legal service sector in response to the effects resulting from the coronavirus epidemic.
An international mediation center for commercial affairs opened at the Hainan International Arbitration Court in south China's Hainan Province on Jun 1.
A new law to be implemented from June 1 provides for heavier penalties for organizations or individuals threatening the safety of medics and harming their dignity.
Gao Zicheng, a deputy to the 13th National People's Congress (NPC), China's top legislature, and president of the Beijing Lawyers Association, hailed the passage of China's Civil Code during a recent interview, calling it a milestone in the process of building rule of law in the country.
Ministry of Justice of the
People's Republic of China