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For law professor Hou Xinyi, the designation of Constitution Day in 2014 was the culmination of his years of efforts. Ever since Hou became a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) in 2008, he had made proposals to designate a constitution festival in the country.
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Han Deyun started his law career in 1994, the year when China began to allow private law firms to operate, after quitting his teaching job at a law university in Southwest China's Chongqing municipality. "Thanks to the reform and opening-up policy, I had the chance to become a professional lawyer," said Han.
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Since 2003, Qin's law office has helped some 20,000 farmer-turned workers recover more than 200 million yuan ($32 million) in delayed payments. "Someone called me 'silly' after learning I spend so much time and money helping strangers reclaim their salary," said Qin. "But pursuing justice is my responsibility as a lawyer. The value I realize cannot be measured by cash".
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Promoting rule of law is not always best left to the judiciary, at least not in the case of the wrongly-executed Hugjiltu. Tang Ji, the 58-year-old Xinhua reporter behind the reverse of his conviction, did nine years' tireless and largely unappreciated work to help restore Hugjiltu’s reputation.
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Just like what Guo Xingli said in his previous speech titled "My dream, my road", promoting the rule of law in remote villages is more than a job for him but a lifetime pursuit. Having been working as a grassroots judge in Kaifeng town, Jian'ge county of Sichuan province for 24 years, Guo is dubbed "pack basket judge" by local people for his decades-long image of carrying pack baskets to villagers’ homes to handle cases.