The evolvement of that field of law in China may be divided into four distinct periods from the early twentieth century: the first, represented by the codified rules of the Regulation on the Application of the Laws of 1918, enacted shortly after the fall of Qing Dynasty in 1911 the second, from the proclamation of People's Republic of China in 1949, with the repeal of Regulation 1918 and lasting until 1979, period in which China had experienced the absence of a normative set of conflict rules the third, beginning in 1980, with the enactment of scattered PIL rules and the latter characterized by the entry into force of the 2010 Chinese Statute on the Application of Laws to Civil Relationships Involving Foreign Elements. The article analyzes the historical background of the development of private international law in China and focuses on the steps of its consolidation as normative and legislative discipline, also essential to the shaping of contemporary Chinese law.
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