Publications for Bing Ling 2021 2020 2018 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Publications for Bing Ling 2021 2020 2018 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 Publications for Bing Ling 2021 Beijing, China: Presentation. Ling, B. (2021). The New Contract Law in the Chinese Civil Ling, B. (2014). Rule of Law in Foreign Policy-making: Code. The Chinese Journal of Comparative Law, 8, 1-77. <a China's Non-Appearance in the South China Sea Arbitration. href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cjcl/cxaa030">[More 9th Annual Conference of the European China Law Studies Information]</a> Association (ECLS) 2014: Making, Enforcing and Accessing 2020 the Law, Hong Kong: Presentation. Ling, B. (2014). The Development of Rule of Law in China Ling, B. (2020). Constitutional and Legal Framework of the under the Xi Jinping Administration (2012-14). Hong Kong National Security Law. Webinar on National Security Law of Hong Kong: Legal and Social Implications, Ling, B. (2014). The Limit of Cosmopolitanism: The Role of Sydney, NSW: Presentation. Comparative Contract Law in China's Reform of Contract Law. Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law Ling, B. (2020). Dispute Settlement Mechanism of International Third Annual Conference 2014 - Stepping away from the State: Organisations: An Examination of the Jurisdiction of the Universality and Cosmopolitanism in International and International Court of Justice (in Chinese). China Law Review, Comparative Law, Cambridge, England: Presentation. 34(4), 2-11. Ling, B. (2020). Does NPC's National Security Legislation 2013 Conform with Article 159 of the Basic Law (in Chinese). Ming Ling, B. (2013). A Tale of Two Jurisdictions: China's State Pao Daily. Secret Law and Disclosure Rules on Cross-border Financial Ling, B. (2020). International Proceedings against China for Information. Shanghai Forum 2013, Shanghai, China: COVID-19 Compensation. Online Workshop on Covid-19, Presentation. International Law and the Post-Pandemic International Order, Ling, B. (2013). China's Non-Appearance in the Philippines v. Hong Kong: Presentation. China UNCLOS Arbitration Case. National Institute for South Ling, B. (2020). Protective Jurisdiction and Hong Kong's China Studies 2013, Haikou, China: Presentation. National Security Law. Webinar on Hong Kong National Ling, B. (2013). Jurisdictional Conflicts: New Problems for Security Law and Extraterritoriality, Hong Kong: Presentation. China. Fourth Cross-Strait Forum on International Law 2013, Ling, B. (2020). The Book on Contracts in the Chinese Civil Beijing, China: Presentation. Code from a Comparative Perspective. Online Symposium on Ling, B. (2013). The 'confused topic' of act of state under the the Civil Code of China, Hong Kong: Presentation. Hong Kong Basic Law. The Chinese Journal of Comparative Ling, B. (2020). The National Security Legislation of HKSAR Law, 1(1), 84-111. <a Should Have Public Consultation. Ming Pao Daily. href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cjcl/cxt006">[More Information]</a> 2018 Ling, B. (2013). The Bo Xilai Trial Bolsters Judicial Reform Ling, B. (2018). China's Attitude to the International Legal [Chinese]. Ta Kung Pao. Order in the Xi Era: The Case of South China Sea, [Indo- Ling, B. (2013). The Philippines v. China Arbitration Case and Pacific Focus] Policy Brief No. 4, (pp. 1 - 11). Tokyo, Japan: the Judicial Settlement of Disputes in the South China Sea. 20th Japan Institute of International Affairs. <a Conference on Maritime Police, Taoyuan, Taiwan: Presentation. href="http://www2.jiia.or.jp/en/article_page_pr.php?id=7">[Mo re Information]</a> Ling, B. (2013). Will Snowden's Extradition Trigger a US- China Dispute? [Chinese]. Ta Kung Pao. Ling, B. (2018). Contract Law in China (2nd Edition) (Forthcoming). Hong Kong: Sweet & Maxwell Asia. 2012 2015 Ling, B. (2012). Civil Codification in China. 2012 Thematic Congress of International Academy of Comparative Law, Ling, B. (2015). Book Review: Introduction to the Hong Kong Taipei: National Taiwan University. Basic Law. DANNY GITTINGS. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2013 413 pp. \$40.00 ISBN 978-988-8139-49- 1. The China Quarterly, 221, 258-259. <a 2011 href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0305741015000144">[More Ling, B. (2011). America's Real Intent in Its Involvement in the Information]</a> South China Sea. Shanghai Morning Post. 2014 Ling, B. (2011). CFA's Referral of Interpretation Tests Rule of Law at NPC. Ming Pao Daily. Ling, B. (2014). China's Changing Attitude to International Law: The Case of the South China Sea Disputes. Annual Ling, B. (2011). Contract Law and the Treatment of Non- Workshop on Chinese Law 2014, Camperdown, NSW: Performing Loans in China. Law and Development in China - Presentation. The Legal Dimension of China’s Development Model (Research Symposium), Singapore: National University of Singapore. Ling, B. (2014). Procedural Issues Relating to China's Non- Appearance in the South China Sea Arbitration. International Ling, B. (2011). Phone Tapping Scandal and the Limits of Press Symposium on the Philippines V. China Arbitration Case 2014, Rights in the West. Shanghai Morning Post. Ling, B. (2011). State Immunity and the 'High Degree of Association for the Promotion of the Macau Basic Law. Autonomy' of Hong Kong. 2011 International Law Association Asia-Pacific Regional Conference, Taiwan: International Law 2006 Association. Ling, B. (2006). Anti-Secession Law in Dilemma [Chinese]. 2010 Ming Pao Daily. Ling, B. (2006). Can Lai Changxing Be Extradited Back: Legal Ling, B. (2010). Communal Interest and the Security of Private Issues in the Pursuit of Escaped Criminal Suspects [Chinese]. Contract in China. A Case Study. 5th International Conference Bauhinia, 7, 60-61. on Interdisciplinary Social Sciences. Ling, B. (2006). Contribution of Judge Ni Zhengyu to the work Ling, B. (2010). One Country Two Systems and Sovereign of The International Court of Justice. Symposium in memory of Immunity. Second Cross- Strait Symposium on International Judges Ni Zhengyu and Li Haopei on Their 100th birthday, Law. Suzhou. 2009 Ling, B. (2006). The United Nations Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property and Ling, B. (2009). China's Response to the Memorandum: China's Position. Conference on the New Developments and Introduction and Critical Assessment. Roundtable on Regional Trends in International Law, Tongli. Autonomy and Central-Local Relations in China, Hong Kong, China. 2005 Ling, B. (2009). International Legal Effects of the Sino - Ling, B. (2005). A Case for Extraterritorialty. In Fu Hualing, Japanese Principled Consensus on East China Sea. 16th Carole J. Petersen and Simon N.M. Young (Eds.), National Academic Conference on Maritime Conference. Security and Fundamental Freedoms: Hong Kong's Article 23 Ling, B. (2009). Liu Xiaobo Case and Freedom of Speech Under Scrutiny, (pp. 399-426). Hong Kong: Hong Kong [Chinese]. Ming Pao Daily. University Press. Ling, B. (2009). Recent Developments in American Ling, B. (2005). Henkin's International Legal Theory and the International Law Theories. 2009 Annual Conference of the Recent Development in American Scholarship on International Chinese Society of International Law. Law. 2005 Symposium of International Law Scholars in East China. 2008 Ling, B. (2005). Sovereignty as Responsibility to Protect: A Ling, B. (2008). Constitutionalism and Acess to Social Justice Preliminary Analysis. 2005 Annual Meeting of the Chinese in China: The Case of 'Nail Household'. Harvard Project for Society of International Law. Asian and International Relations (HPAIR) Academic Conference. 2004 Ling, B. (2008). Is One Country Two Systems Model Ling, B. (2004). Anti-Secession Law Not Conducive to Internationally Applicable? Conference on "One Country Two Peaceful Reunification. Ming Pao Daily. Systems: Comparative Perspectives". Ling, B. (2004). Excessive Claims of Jurisdiction and Ling, B. (2008). Kosovo Independence and he Cross-Strait Transnational Economic Regulation. Conference on China's Relationship [Chinese]. Ming Pao Daily. Peaceful Development and International Law, Beijing. 2007 Ling, B. (2004). Extraterritorial Legislative Power of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region [Chinese]. In G.Rao Ling, B. (2007). Does Beijing Have Uncontrained Symposium (Eds.), High Like Mountains and Long Like Rivers: Collected on 'Hong Kong Ten Years After'. International Symposium on Essays in Honour of Professor Wang Tieya, (pp. 273-285). 'Hong Kong Ten Years After'. China: Peking University Press. Ling, B. (2007). Introduction to Chinese contract law since the Ling, B. (2004). Fragmentation of the Contemporary statute of 15 March 1999. Colloquium on Contract Law in International Legal System. 2004 Annual Conference of the China and Europe Conference. Chinese Society of International Law on China's Road to Peaceful Development. Ling, B. (2007). Legal Education in Hong Kong: Ten Years after the Handover [English & Chinese]. China Law, 3, 57; 153- Ling, B. (2004). State Responsibility for Violation of 59; 156. International Humanitarian Law. Symposium on Weapons and International Humanitarian Law. Ling, B. (2007). One Country Two Systems and the Limits to the Power of the NPCSC to Interpret the Basic Law. Ling, B. (2004). The Book Gifts from Professor Wang Conference on the Retrospects and Prospects of the Basic Law. [Chinese]. In G.Rao (Eds.), High Like Mountains and Long Like Rivers: Collected Essays in Honour of Professor Wang Ling, B. (2007). Subject Matter Limitation on the NPCSC's Tieya, (pp. 355-358). China: Peking University Press. Power to Interpret the Basic Law. Hong Kong Law Journal, 37(2), 619-649. Ling, B. (2004). The Development of Comparative Law Scholarship and Its Impact
Recommended publications
  • Curriculum Vitae ……………….…………… 2 - List of Publications…………………………… 10 - List of University Courses Taught…………… 30 - List of Guest Lectures………………………
    Prof. Dr. Peter Malanczuk page - Curriculum Vitae ……………….…………… 2 - List of Publications…………………………… 10 - List of University Courses Taught…………… 30 - List of Guest Lectures………………………... 36 - List of Contributions to Conferences…………. 50 20120410 Malanczuk Full CV (compiled) Page 1 of 73 Prof. Dr. iur Peter Malanczuk Peking University School of Transnational Law Email: [email protected] PKU Shenzhen Campus HomePage: www.malanczuk.com Graduate School Building B University Town Nanshan District, Xili Shenzhen, 518055 P.R. China Current positions: C.V. Starr Professor of Law, Peking University (PKU) School of Transnational Law [First American-style J.D. programme approved by the State Council in China] located at the PKU Shenzhen Campus Co-Director, Center for Research on Transnational Law (CTL), PKU STL Member of the Academic Advisory Council of the University of Heidelberg, Germany Courses currently taught: Transnational Law Advanced Transnational Law International Economic Law International Commercial Arbitration and ADR International Investment Law and Investor-State Dispute Settlement Curriculum Vitae 1948 Born in Salzgitter-Bad, Germany 1950 Emigration to Canada (Canadian nationality 1958-71) 1959 Return to Germany (German nationality since 1971) Since 2008 Permanent Resident of Hong Kong (SAR), P.R. China Education: 1955-59 Primary school, Sudbury & Toronto, Ontario, Canada 1960-68 Gymnasium Salzgitter-Bad, Germany (Abitur) 1968-73 Studies at the Universities of Göttingen, München and Heidelberg (Certificate: First State Law Examination
    [Show full text]
  • Quality Control in International Fact-Finding Outside Criminal Justice for Core International Crimes
    130522 Quality Control in International Fact-Finding Outside Criminal Justice for Core International Crimes The 2013 LI Haopei Lecture and Seminar A seminar organized by the Forum for International Criminal and Humanitarian Law, the European University Institute, and Peking University International Law Institute, on 20 May 2013, 09:00-18:00, at The Refectory, Badia Fiesolana, European University Institute, Florence. There are academic efforts under way to map, and analyse best practices of, the plethora of in- ternational fact-finding1 commissions and other mandates2 to look into allegations of serious violations of international criminal, humanitarian or human rights law. There have been signifi- cant developments in international practice in this area since the Commission of Experts for the former Yugoslavia established pursuant to United Nations Security Council resolution 780 (1992), an institution which served as a catalyst for later developments. The FICHL supports these academic efforts, and it seeks, together with the European University Institute and Peking University International Law Institute, to supplement them by focusing the 2013 LI Haopei Seminar on the specific topic of ‘Quality Control in International Fact-Finding Outside Criminal Justice for Core International Crimes’.3 To serve the interests of professionalization, how can the quality of international fact- finding, -analysis and -reporting be improved? How should the significant developments in fact- work in international criminal jurisdictions since the mid-1990s
    [Show full text]
  • China's Approach to Human Rights and the UN Human Rights Agenda
    This is a repository copy of China’s Approach to Human Rights and the UN Human Rights Agenda. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/96001/ Version: Accepted Version Article: Subedi, SP (2015) China’s Approach to Human Rights and the UN Human Rights Agenda. Chinese Journal of International Law, 14 (3). pp. 437-464. ISSN 1540-1650 https://doi.org/10.1093/chinesejil/jmv037 Reuse Unless indicated otherwise, fulltext items are protected by copyright with all rights reserved. The copyright exception in section 29 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 allows the making of a single copy solely for the purpose of non-commercial research or private study within the limits of fair dealing. The publisher or other rights-holder may allow further reproduction and re-use of this version - refer to the White Rose Research Online record for this item. Where records identify the publisher as the copyright holder, users can verify any specific terms of use on the publisher’s website. Takedown If you consider content in White Rose Research Online to be in breach of UK law, please notify us by emailing [email protected] including the URL of the record and the reason for the withdrawal request. [email protected] https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/ China’s Approach to Human Rights and the UN Human Rights Agenda Surya P. Subedi* Abstract There is an apprehension in the democratic world about the possible impact of the economic rise of China on the UN human rights agenda.
    [Show full text]
  • A Tribute to Professor Wang Tieya
    A Tribute to Professor Wang Tieya Sienho Yee Professor Wang Tieya and I were several generations apart. Yet we had something in common. We were co-editors for two projects: a book in honor of Li Haopei,1 a dear friend of his and a kind supervisor of mine, and the Chinese Journal of International Law. To some extent we were both rebels. We both had done things that might be perceived to go against common wisdom. Despite the fact that he had been such an eminent scholar when I, a fun-loving undergraduate at Peking University, was introduced to him, Professor Wang displayed no air of importance or stature that normally one might see in a person on Olympic heights. Soon we developed a friendship that in Chinese would be called “Wangnianzhijiao”, friendship defying the gap of age. We shared stories. We exchanged arguments. He critiqued my works. He appreciated a good argument when he saw one. He criticized a questionable one when he found it. He gave credit where it was due. I benefited greatly from his wisdom. Then in 1998, it was suggested that Professor Wang and I co-edit the memorial collection for Li Haopei. Professor Wang immediately accepted the task, despite the fact that I was still a very young man then, although older than I was when I was introduced to him.2 That project was completed in 2000 and the book was published in 2001. In the course of editing that book, some of the disputes between some authors and me were put to him for final decision.
    [Show full text]
  • Is It Possible to Prevent Or Punish Future Aggressive War-Making?
    Is it Possible to Prevent or Punish Future Aggressive War‐making? Address by Judge Dr. jur. h. c. Hans‐Peter Kaul Second Vice‐President of the International Criminal Court At the Li Haopei Lecture Series “Implications of the Criminalization of Aggression” 8 February 2011 Forum for International Criminal and Humanitarian Law Oslo, Norway Check against delivery – embargoed until 8 February 2011, at 14h00. Let me begin with a question, a question of some importance. Is it the natural right, the inherent right of States to make war? Is war-making a national right? When we look at the reality of today’s world, it seems quite obvious that certain States, powerful States, continue to reserve for them, openly or more discreetly, also as some kind of hidden agenda, the option to go to war for their interests. The question, however, is crucial: Is it the natural, the inherent right of States or governments to use military force against other States when they believe it is in their interest? This is the fundamental question which is at the centre of today’s lecture. As some may know, on 11 June 2010, something surprising, something unexpected happened: against all odds, against most expectations, the Review Conference of the International Criminal Court (ICC) held in Kampala, Uganda adopted a full and complete package proposal on the crime of aggression. The amendments to the Rome Statute contain a definition of the crime of aggression and set out the conditions under which the Court will have, from 2017 onwards, jurisdiction with regard to this crime.
    [Show full text]
  • Republican Judicial Modernization and Its Legacies to the People's Republic of China
    An Irresistible Inheritance: Republican Judicial Modernization and Its Legacies to the People’s Republic of China Glenn Tiffert, University of California, Berkeley Abstract Commentators have long treated the Republican and People’s Republic of China (PRC) judicial systems in nearly hermetic isolation from each other. Yet it is impossible to grasp fully the history of the PRC judicial system independent of its Republican heritage, and to decouple the two is therefore to foreclose critical avenues of understanding. As a step toward repairing that rupture, this paper specifies the configurations and distributions of courts, as well as the discourses of judicial malaise and reform that the Republican period deposited on the doorstep of the PRC. It establishes the necessary empirical foundation from which to appreciate the institutional deficits and imbalances, developmental dilemmas, and normative discourses that confronted Chinese Communist Party (CCP) judicial planners in 1949, and it equips the reader to understand the planners’ responses—not just through the lens of ideology but also as reasoned reactions to concrete, practical problems. Additionally, this paper suggests that memory of the Republican judicial system served as a repository of value from which to shape, assess, and comprehend law’s fate in the PRC. Keywords: Republican China, Chinese judicial system About the 1949 Chinese Revolution, the eminent PRC legal reformer and scholar Cai Dingjian1 once observed that if we had overthrown the old legal order generally, yet embraced the attitude that law could be inherited; if we had not criticized or scorned it all; if we had concretely analyzed specific laws, brought forward a series of legal concepts— such as justice, equality, impartiality, the authority of law, respect for law, honesty, keeping one’s word, and so on—and inherited concrete rules and procedures for resolving conflicts, then the construction of New China’s legal system would not have had such a low starting point, and perhaps would not have met such misfortune.
    [Show full text]
  • An Analysis of Expropriation and Nationalization Risk in China
    An Analysis of Expropriation and Nationalization Risk in China Lianlian Lint John R. Alisontt I. CHINA IN THE EMERGiNG GLOBAL ECONOMY ............................ 136 H. NATIONALIZATION, EXPROPRIATION, AND OTHER HOST-GOVERNMENT TAKINGS OF FOREIGN ASSETS ......................................... 138 . THE COMPENSATION STANDARD: FROM THE HULL RULE TO APPROPRIATE COMPENSATION AND PEIRHAPS BACK AGAIN ....................... 141 A. U.N. Documents and Their Interpretation .......................... 144 B. DecisionalAuthority ........................................ 147 C. Actual Claims-Settlement Practicesof Developing Countries ............... 152 D. Continued Vitality of the TraditionalStandard ........................ 154 IV. EXPROPRIATION RISK IN CHINA: THEORY, POLICY, LAW, AND PRACTICE ............................................. 159 A. Chinese Academic Theory ..................................... 160 1. The Debate on Legislative Immunity from Expropriation .............. 161 a. Sovereignty and Self-Restraint .......................... 161 b. The Right of Expropriation ............................ 162 C. China and the Third World ............................. 163 2. Academic Debate on Other Issues ........................... 163 a. The Nature of Property .............................. 164 b. A Question of Domestic or InternationalLaw? ................ 165 C. The NondiscriminationPrinciple ......................... 166 d. The Compensation Standard ........................... 167 B. China's Expressions of Government Policy .........................
    [Show full text]
  • Charting Socio-Legal Approaches to International Law in China: Taking the Interdisciplinary Study of International Law and History As an Example
    E-ISSN 2281-4612 Academic Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies Vol 9 No 1 January 2020 ISSN 2281-3993 www.richtmann.org . Research Article © 2020 Shisong Jiang. This is an open access article licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) Charting Socio-Legal Approaches to International Law in China: Taking the Interdisciplinary Study of International Law and History as an Example Shisong Jiang Institute of Law, Politics and Development, Scuola Superiore Sant’Anna, Italy; Faculty of Law, University of Antwerp, Belgium Doi: 10.36941/ajis-2020-0001 Abstract The mainstream of international legal academia has started to address a distinctive fundamental question of whether international law is international in recent years, in which national differences in terms of the understandings of and approaches to international law have been (re)recognized and accentuated. Thanks to its increasing importance and influence in the international community, the ways in which China engages with a variety of international legal issues and topics have garnered more attention from the so-called western scholars. Meanwhile, Chinese international legal scholars have also committed to establishing a Chinese school of international law through which to intensively and comprehensively showcase its own characteristics in this regard. Against this backdrop, this article aims to unveil the underestimated part of its characteristics concerning the socio-legal scholarship in China’s international law research by taking the interdisciplinary study of international law and history as an example. To that end, this article first reviews the overall configuration of international law research in China and roughly summarizes the current “Chinese characteristics” as follows: 1.
    [Show full text]
  • The PLA and International Humanitarian Law: Achievements and Challenges
    The PLA and International Humanitarian Law: Achievements and Challenges Wang Wenjuan ASIA PAPER October 2013 The PLA and International Humanitarian Law: Achievements and Challenges Wang Wenjuan (Translated from Chinese by Kelly Chen) Institute for Security and Development Policy Västra Finnbodavägen 2, 131 30 Stockholm-Nacka, Sweden www.isdp.eu The PLA and International Humanitarian Law: Achievements and Challenges is an Asia Paper published by the Institute for Security and Development Policy. The Asia Pa- pers Series is the Occasional Paper series of the Institute’s Asia Program, and addresses topical and timely subjects. The Institute is based in Stockholm, Sweden, and cooperates closely with research centers worldwide. Through its Silk Road Studies Program, the In- stitute runs a joint Transatlantic Research and Policy Center with the Central Asia-Cau- casus Institute of Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies. The Institute is firmly established as a leading research and policy center, serving a large and diverse community of analysts, scholars, policy-watchers, business leaders, and journalists. It is at the forefront of research on issues of conflict, security, and develop- ment. Through its applied research, publications, research cooperation, public lectures, and seminars, it functions as a focal point for academic, policy, and public discussion. The opinions and conclusions expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Institute for Security and Development Policy or its sponsors. © Institute for Security and Development Policy, 2013 ISBN: 978-91-86635-66-4 Printed in Singapore Distributed in Europe by: Institute for Security and Development Policy Västra Finnbodavägen 2, 131 30 Stockholm-Nacka, Sweden Tel.
    [Show full text]
  • State Sovereignty and International Criminal Law Morten Bergsmo and LING Yan (Editors)
    State Sovereignty and International Criminal Law Morten Bergsmo and LING Yan (editors) PURL: https://www.legal-tools.org/doc/82ec96/ PURL: https://www.legal-tools.org/doc/82ec96/ State Sovereignty and International Criminal Law Morten Bergsmo and LING Yan (editors) 2012 Torkel Opsahl Academic EPublisher Beijing PURL: https://www.legal-tools.org/doc/82ec96/ This and other books in the FICHL Publication Series may be openly accessed and downloaded through the website www.fichl.org. This site uses Persistent URLs (PURL) for all publications it makes available. The URLs of these publications will not be changed. Printed copies may be ordered through online distributors such as www.amazon.co.uk. This book was first published on 19 November 2012. © Torkel Opsahl Academic EPublisher, 2012 All rights are reserved. You may read, print or download this book or any part of it from www.fichl.org for personal use, but you may not in any way charge for its use by others, directly or by reproducing it, storing it in a retrieval system, transmitting it, or utilising it in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, in whole or in part, without the prior permission in writing of the copyright holder. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the copyright holder. You must not circulate this book in any other cover and you must impose the same condition on any acquirer. You must not make this book or any part of it available on the Internet by any other URL than that on www.fichl.org.
    [Show full text]
  • Morten Bergsmo and Ling Yan (Eds). State Sovereignty and International Criminal Law
    Book Reviews 625 Morten Bergsmo and Ling Yan (eds). State Sovereignty and International Criminal Law. Beijing: Torkel Opsahl Academic EPublisher, 2012. Pp. 281. £15. ISBN: 9788293081357. State Sovereignty and International Criminal Law, edited by Morten Bergsmo and Ling Yan, brings together two recent issues of international law: the rise of international criminal law as a building block in the nascent constitution of the international legal order and the increasingly active par- ticipation of China in international law. Even though China is a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC), it has until recently been de facto absent from the debates over norms of international law. Likewise, international criminal justice is a field of law that stagnated for more than 40 years. The last two decades have witnessed a revival of both phoenixes. This anthology, prepared in the context of the Li Haopei Lecture Series of the Forum for Downloaded from International Criminal Law, offers the view of Chinese and European international lawyers, scholars and judges on three issues: immunity of state officials from foreign prosecution for international crimes; universal jurisdiction and the newly adopted amendment to the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (Rome Statute) on the crime of aggression.1 These three issues are highly topical. http://ejil.oxfordjournals.org/ In the third and perhaps pivotal chapter, Zhou Lulu, director of the Treaty Division of the Department of Treaty and Law, Ministry Foreign Affairs of China, gives a brief analysis of a few controversial issues in contemporary international criminal law. All of the controversial issues addressed in this article, including aggression, universal jurisdiction and immunity, are dis- cussed by the other contributors to the book – some agreeing and some disagreeing with Zhou.
    [Show full text]
  • Wang Guiguo (Ed.), a Study on the Legal Issues Concerning Regional Arrangement, Peking University Press (2004), Pp
    GUIGUO WANG Current Positions: Eason-Weinmann Chair of International and Comparative Law, School of Law, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, USA University Professor and Scholar of National One Thousand Talent Plan, Guanghua Law School, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, China President, Academy of International Strategy and Law of Zhejiang University, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, China President, International Academy of the Belt and Road, Hong Kong Member, The International Commercial Expert Committee of the People’s Supreme Court of China EDUCATION 1984 J.S.D. degree, Yale Law School 1982 LL.M. degree, Columbia Law School 1981 LL.M. candidate, Peking University, Law Department 1980 Interim, under the United Nations Scholarship, The International Court of Justice, The Legal Affairs Department of the United Nations and the Legal Department of the World Bank 1979 Diploma (B.A. Equivalent) Beijing Foreign Studies University EMPLOYMENT HISTORY Sept. 2015 forward, Eason-Weinmann Chair of International and Comparative Law, School of Law, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, USA 1 Sept. 2015 forward, University Professor and Scholar of National One Thousand Talent Plan, Guanghua Law School, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, China Oct. 2017 forward, President, Academy of International Strategy and Law of Zhejiang University, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, China Oct 1995 — Aug. 2015 Chair Professor of Chinese and Comparative Law, School of Law, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Sept 2013 — Aug. 2015 Director, Centre for Judicial Education and Research, City University of Hong Kong Aug.—Dec. 2014, Eason-Weinmann Chair of International and Comparative Law, School of Law, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, USA Aug 2007 – Jul 2013 Dean and Chair Professor of Chinese and Comparative Law Sept - Oct 1999 Visiting Professor, China-Europe International Business School, Shanghai, China Jan 1994 – Dec.
    [Show full text]