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The Ministry of Public Security (MPS, Chinese: 公安部; pinyin: Gōng'ānbù) [a] is a government ministry of the People's Republic of China responsible for public and political security. It oversees more than 1.9 million of the country's law enforcement officers and as such the vast majority of the People's Police.
Journal of Chinese Political Science is a hybrid open access peer-reviewed academic journal published quarterly by Springer Science+Business Media on behalf of the Association of Chinese Political Studies, covering theoretical and empirical research articles on Chinese politics across the whole spectrum of political science.
International economic law and history of law are the key subjects assigned by the Ministry of Justice, and the subject of law is the key subject by the local government. The university has four journals, named, Law, Studies of Crime, Issues of Juvenile delinquency, and the Journal of East China University of Political Science and Law.
In 1983, under the policy of Central People's Government to develop the college quickly and make it the center of politics and law education in China, BCPSL was renamed as the China University of Political Science and Law. The Changping campus was a part of the State's Seventh Five-Year-Plan in 1985.
The Ministry of Public Security (MPS, Chinese: 公安部; pinyin: Gōng'ānbù) [a] is a government ministry of the People's Republic of China responsible for public and political security. It oversees more than 1.9 million of the country's law enforcement officers and as such the vast majority of the People's Police.
The People's Armed Police Force [3] [b] is a paramilitary organization of the People's Republic of China [4]: 121 primarily responsible for internal security, riot control, counter-terrorism, disaster response, law enforcement and maritime rights protection [5] as well as providing support to the People's Liberation Army (PLA) during wartime.
Political Security (1st Bureau of the MPS): Responsible for maintaining social and political stability, upholding the political principles established by the Constitution, and handling cases that undermine national and cultural unity (with some tasks falling under the 4th Bureau, specifically those having to do with investigating religious ...
Authors generally consider journals indexed in the CSSCI to be superior so favour writing articles for those journals. [7] Lecturers and associate professors' career advancement is reliant on how many CSSCI journal articles they have written. [7] The 2017–2018 edition of the index had 23 CSSCI law journals. [7]