中国人民大学法学院 | |
Type | Public |
---|---|
Established | 1950 |
Location | Beijing, China |
Dean | Han Dayuan |
Website | law |
Renmin University of China Law School, formerly Renmin University of China Department of Law, is the school of law under Renmin University of China. It was founded as the Department of Law in 1950 and renamed to Law School in 1988. According to evaluation reports of Ministry of Education of China in both 2004 and 2009, Renmin University of China Law School ranked 1st among law schools in China. Its current dean is Han Dayuan, Honorary Dean is Zeng Xianyi, Deputy Deans are Long Yifei, Liu Mingxiang, Hu Jinguang, and Wang Yi.
After its founding in 1950, RUC Law School became the first institution of higher legal education in the People’s Republic of China and, as such, is dubbed by many as the "cradle" nurturing China's most outstanding jurists. RUC Law School inherited the vaunted tradition of the former Chaoyang University when the two schools merged shortly after the founding of the PRC. Established in 1912, Chaoyang University became so synonymous with legal practice in China that the saying went: “no Chaoyang, no courts”.
Chaoyang University's legacy of producing nationally recognized jurists endures in the RUC Law School of today where students and faculty continue to lead the development of China’s legal system. Since 1950, more than 20,000 students have graduated from RUC Law School, while more than 300,000 jurists have received training from the Law School as continuing education students, judges, procurators, lawyers, university faculty members, and civil servants. A significant number of alumni have become leaders in advancing China’s rule of law as government officials, judges, academics, public interest and corporate lawyers.
At present, RUC Law School educates more than 3,000 students annually with graduate students accounting for approximately 80% of the student body. The Law School confers undergraduate (LL.B.) and graduate degrees (LL.D. and LL.M.) in all secondary disciplines of law, including one national first-level key discipline and four national second-level key disciplines. RUC Law School also offers a bachelor's degree in Law with a concentration in Intellectual Property Rights. Authorized by the State Council of China, the Law School established the nation’s first post-doctoral research center covering all doctoral subject areas.
RUC Law School’s 43 research institutes carry-out numerous projects of national—and international—importance. These research institutes include two Ministry of Education sponsored humanities and social science research centers, the Research Center for Criminal Jurisprudence, the Research Center of Civil & Commercial Jurisprudence, and the RUC Center for Disabled Person's Law & Legal Services. RUC Law School’s expansive library houses more than 300,000 volumes, including over 50,000 foreign language sources. There are over 1,300 Chinese and 3,000 foreign law journals available to students, faculty and visiting scholars. RUC Law School edits and publishes the nation’s leading law journal, the ‘Jurists’ Review’, as well as the ‘RUC Law Review’ and the ‘Chaoyang Law Review’. The Law School also publishes an internationally distributed English law journal, ‘Frontiers of Law in China’, which connects an English readership with the swiftly shifting trends that define China’s contemporary legal landscape. In efforts to make our scholarship more readily available to an increasingly internet-based society, the Law School runs a nationally recognized website entitled ‘China Civil & Commercial Law’.