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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, July 2, 2007

Explore law and order, Chinese-style

By Frazier Moore
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

A mobile court in China's Sichuan Province is shown in a scene from the "Wide Angle" presentation "The People's Court." The episode takes viewers inside the courtrooms and law schools of China.

PBS photo via AP

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'THE PEOPLE'S COURT'

9 p.m. tomorrow

PBS

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It's a different kind of People's Court than viewers may remember when Judge Wapner was presiding.

This is China, where, as business booms and capitalism takes firm root, a new form of jurisprudence rushes to keep pace.

Marking the return of "Wide Angle" for its sixth season of documentaries about global affairs, "The People's Court" takes viewers inside Chinese courtrooms and law schools for a portrait of the country's legal revolution.

"The more the economy grows, the more we see problems that need legal action," a judge says. Employee disputes, traffic accidents, divorce petitions, migrant labor conflicts — they all were among the 8 million cases jamming Chinese courts last year.

In the past quarter-century, the country has opened nearly 400 law schools, trained hundreds of thousands of judges and lawyers, and launched education campaigns to encourage people to bring their grievances to court rather than taking to the streets.

Even so, more than 99 percent of criminal cases end in convictions, and China executes more prisoners every year than the rest of the world combined. Profiling itinerant judges, law students, a human-rights lawyer and ordinary citizens, "The People's Court" raises a fundamental question about Chinese law: Is it possible to get a fair trial?

Future editions of "Wide Angle" will explore a legendary boxing academy in Cuba, an allfemale talk show shaking up the Arab world, and the impact of new racial quotas in Brazil.

With Daljit Dhaliwal back as host, "Wide Angle" airs tomorrow on PBS.

Other shows to look out for:

  • The time traveler known simply as The Doctor returns to your present-day TV for Sci Fi channel's third season of "Doctor Who." Full of new laughs, thrills and terrifying monsters, this new cycle finds the Doctor entering the life of Martha Jones, and changing it forever as, together, they zip through time and space.

    In Elizabethan London, they meet William Shakespeare. In New York circa 1930, they come face to face with the Doctor's sworn enemies, the Daleks, busy plotting against humanity. The adventures started Friday with a special, "The Runaway Bride," when the Doctor meets a mysterious woman in a wedding gown. Following that episode, medical student Martha Jones was startled to find her entire hospital transported to the moon, where fearsome beasts (and the Doctor) await. David Tennant and Freema Agyeman star.

  • Did you ever wonder: What if dinosaurs hadn't died out? "DinoSapien" is a new scripted kids' series that imagines a modern world where dinosaurs cohabit with humans ... say, a human like Lauren, who befriends a highly evolved dinosaur she christens Eno. Unfortunately, a pack of dangerous dinosaurs are on the prowl for Eno, as is paleontologist Dr. Clive Aikens (James Coombes), who wants to capture Eno for his own sinister purposes. Meanwhile, Lauren (Brittney Wilson) is determined to find her father, a paleontologist who vanished suspiciously while on a fossil-hunting expedition. "DinoSapien" airs at 7 a.m. Saturday on Discovery Kids Channel.