China is a unitary socialist state led by the Communist Party of China (CPC), which sets national strategy and supervises every branch of government:
National People's Congress (NPC): The highest legislative body. It amends the Constitution, passes laws, and elects key state leaders. Year‑round duties fall to its Standing Committee.
State Council: The executive branch, led by the Premier, drafts policy, issues administrative regulations, and manages ministries.
President: Largely ceremonial head of state who promulgates laws and represents China abroad; the office is typically held by the CPC General Secretary.
Supreme People's Court (SPC): Highest court; ensures uniform application of law (see Legal System, below).
Local Governments: Provinces, autonomous regions, and municipalities implement national policy and issue sub‑national regulations under central guidance.
Legal System
China follows a civil law model that emphasizes written rules over judicial precedent.
The Sources of law are:
Constitution – the highest legal authority.
National statutes – broad codes and laws adopted by the National People's Congress or its Standing Committee (e.g., Civil Code, Criminal Law).
Administrative rules – detailed regulations issued by the State Council and ministries to implement those statutes.
Local regulations and normative documents – created by provincial and municipal authorities, valid only if consistent with higher-level laws.
For detail on the structure of the court system, see the Caselaw section of this guide.