As soon as COVID-19 broke out in late January, the judicial administration system of Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region acted swiftly and decisively to shield this southern border region from the epidemic.
The Department of Justice of East China's Shandong province has released a guideline instructing lawyers to provide pro bono legal services for enterprises' work resumption during the period of epidemic prevention.
In the seventh pilot edition of the COVID-19 diagnosis and treatment guidelines released by China's top health authority in early March, a sentence depicting the pathological changes caused by the disease played a significant role in clinical treatment and determination of patients' cause of death: "Most of the damage is done to patients' lungs and immune system; most of the damage to other visceral organs is secondary and varies based on patients' underlying medical conditions."
Shortly after the war on the COVID-19 epidemic began in late January, Gao Sen, an ordinary police officer in the southwestern metropolis of Chongqing, applied to become one of the first participants in the epidemic prevention effort at the local prison where he works
The Ministry of Justice has released the second group of typical cases on public legal services for epidemic prevention and enterprises' work and production resumption amid the COVID-19 epidemic.
Chinese lawyers made positive contributions to epidemic prevention and economic and social development during a month-long campaign jointly launched by the Ministry of Justice and the All China Lawyers Association (ACLA), according to the ministry.
The Ministry of Justice recently released its annual report on building a law-based government, stating that progress was made in all the aspects in 2019.
East China's cosmopolis Shanghai has adopted a variety of measures both traditional and innovative to disseminate legal information on a massive scale in order to fuel epidemic prevention and control.
The Department of Justice of East China's Jiangsu province, together with the province's lawyers’ association, readjusted their legal service resources after the COVID-19 outbreak in late January to ensure adequate legal services for every community and village in the province.
China's judicial administrative organs at all levels have taken various steps to ensure the well-being of the families of police officers who have been working tirelessly to shield the country's prisons from the novel coronavirus since its outbreak.
The Bureau of Public Legal Services Administration of the Ministry of Justice and the China Notary Association have jointly released a guideline on strengthening the discipline of the notary profession and the connection between administrative punishments and the profession's self-disciplinary measures.
The Bureau of Public Legal Service Administration of the Ministry of Justice has rolled out a set of measures for the qualification examination of notary candidates in an effort to streamline the process and beef up the country's notary force.
Ministry of Justice of the
People's Republic of China