The opening of archives on legal case records and judicial
administration in China has made possible a new examination of past
assumptions about the Chinese justice system. Scholars can now ask where
actual legal practice deviated from official and popular
conceptualizations and depictions. In the process, they can arrive at a
new understanding not only of the legal system, but of state-society
relations and the nature of the Chinese social-political system as a
whole. Studies of Chinese justice also permit the joining together of
social and cultural history. Historians of society and economy, on the
one hand, and of mentalities and culture, on the other, have long tended
to go their separate ways. Law, however, is a sphere of life in which
the two are inseparable. Legal case records contain evidence for both
practice and representation. A study of law can tell us about the
interconnections between actions and attitudes in ways that segmented
studies of each cannot.