Thursday, December 31, 2020

New Book: Archbold Hong Kong 2021 (Sweet & Maxwell)

Editor-in-Chief: The Hon Mr Justice Bokhary
General Editor: Professor Simon Young
Sweet & Maxwell
December 2020

Preface by the General Editor
Archbold’s first general editor was John Frederick Archbold. By analogy, Archbold Hong Kong’s first general editor would be considered Hong Kong’s Archbold. Sadly Hong Kong’s Archbold passed away on 28 April 2020. This is a fitting title for Dr Gerard McCoy SC. His encyclopedic knowledge of the law, especially the criminal law, was well known and undoubtedly a matter of judicial notice in many countries. Mr Justice Frank Stock, in his preface to the first edition of this work, described Dr McCoy as “a tireless worker, possessed of a meticulous eye and as well-versed in the principles and detail of the criminal law as one could wish”. Though he appeared for government in a good number of cases, he had a big heart for the underdog and an unrelenting sense of justice. He was also very much reform-minded, which I witnessed having the honour of working with him on two law reform committees and two landmark Court of Final Appeal cases on joint criminal enterprise and refugee non-refoulement. In court, he was as distinguished as any silk who has ever practiced in this jurisdiction, but he was also a compassionate leader who could instantly dissolve the nerves of a junior at the start of a hearing by offering a fist bump with the words ‘Go Team’. He was a lawyer’s lawyer, one who would not hesitate to offer advice, or a case reference, to any fellow member of the bar who sought his assistance. In his practice, he continuously prodded the law, and for that we got to learn so much more about the law, whatever may have been the result in the case. One need only have regard to the cases he handled in his last year to appreciate his unparalleled contribution to the criminal law in Hong Kong. Those cases enhanced our understanding of the right to interpreter assistance in criminal trials (CACC 135/2017; CACC 320/2016), the right to privacy and police searches of mobile phones (CACV 270/2017); remedial interpretation of the Interception of Communications and Surveillance Ordinance (CACC 237/2015), the rule in Browne v Dunn (CACC 65/2017), and the constitutionality of sentences for male buggery offences (CACC 361/2018). This is only a small sample of a corpus of law which he helped to generate. 
    In his preface, echoing the words of Archbold, Dr McCoy wrote that this work would aim “to become ‘a practically useful book’ which identifies and collates the current substantive, procedural, evidential and adjectival criminal law of Hong Kong”. In this spirit, the current edition collates the contents of 《中華人民共和國香港特別行政區維護國家安全法》(Law of the People’s Republic of China on Safeguarding National Security in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region), which was applied locally on 30 June 2020. This National Security Law (NSL) is the most important piece of criminal law legislation applied in Hong Kong in recent times, and practitioners are slowly coming to terms with it. The NSL is currently covered across Chapters 2, 5, 15, 19, 26, 41 and 42, but for the future the aim is to capture NSL jurisprudential developments mainly in Chapter 26, concerned with national security offences.
    Hong Kong’s Archbold ended his preface with the four Chinese characters, 金科玉律, which was likely a reference to Viscount Sankey’s “one golden thread” famously penned in Woolmington v DPP [1935] AC 462, 481. It is a fitting reminder that even in the post-NSL era persons charged with a criminal offence are always presumed innocent, the duty being on the prosecution to prove the person’s guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
    I thank my three able assistant editors (Wilson Lui, Eric Chan, Josh Baker), the entire team of contributing editors who remain so dedicated to this work, the Editor-in-Chief for his wise counsel, and Thomson Reuters (Kevin Stokes, Stephen Blackwell, Abdul Azeem Ali) for all their assistance over the past year.

Professor Simon NM Young
Parkside Chambers
October 2020

HKU Law academics serving as Contributing Editors in this year's volume include Amanda Whitfort (1. The Indictment; 46. Animals), Simon Young (11. The Hearsay Rule; 19. Human Rights), and Michael Jackson (17. Principals and Secondary Parties; 18. Strict Liability).

Monday, December 28, 2020

New Issue of Asia-Pacific Journal on Human Rights and the Law (Issue 2, Dec 2020)

ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL ON HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE LAW


Editors-in-Chief: Simon NM Young and Kelley Loper
Publisher: Brill, Leiden

Table of Contents

Navigating Human Rights in a ‘Post-Human Rights’ Era
Mapping the Terrain through the Lens ofaseanStates
Authors: Rhona Smith and Sean Molloy
Pages: 139–194

The Right to Education in the Era of the ASEAN Community  [Open Access]
A Hope for the Regional Human Rights System
Author: Ratna Juwita
Pages: 195–236

The International Right to Housing, Evictions and the Obligation to Provide Alternative Accommodation
A Comparison of Indonesia and the Netherlands [Open Access]
Authors: Michel Vols and Erna Dyah Kusumawati
Pages: 237–269

Hans Kelsen and Court-Ordered Apology in Taiwan: A Critical Analysis of Judicial Yuan Interpretation No. 656 [2009]
Authors: David KC Huang and Nigel NT Li
Pages: 270–297

Religious Minorities’ Rights in the Iranian Constitution of 1906 and the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran
Authors: Alireza Najafinejad and Masoumeh Rad Goudarzi
Pages: 298–325

Young, Hayward & Ip on Showing Arrested Youth Some Mercy, to begin the Healing Process in Hong Kong (SCMP)

Simon Young, William Hayward, and Paul Ip
2 December 2020 
The social unrest in Hong Kong since June 2019 has been heartbreaking. The scale of disruption and violence is unprecedented. People were harassed or attacked simply over the colour of their clothing. The verbal and emotional abuse arising from supporting the government or taking part in peaceful protest has been disturbing for all.
     The civil behaviour and good order that has characterised Hong Kong for generations seemed to disappear overnight. Road blocks, tear gas and confrontation between demonstrators and police became part of the lifestyle of the city during that period.
      There are many concerns in the community about the enactment of the national security law and its impact on many of Hong Kong’s freedoms. At least some of the violent confrontations have subsided for the moment, but the roots of the problems that led to them have not been addressed. Genuine reconciliation within society needs to occur, otherwise further social unrest might come back at any time.
      The local and central governments have a responsibility to lead in this process given their position of power. Such actions would be for the good of everyone in Hong Kong. One place to start is in resolving the status of those who were arrested... Click here to read the full text. 

Sunday, December 27, 2020

New Book: The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Administrative Law (co-edited by Eric Ip)

The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Administrative Law
Edited by Peter Cane, Herwig C H Hofmann, Eric C Ip, and Peter L Lindseth
Oxford University Press
Published in December 2020
1,168 pp.
Abstract: The comparative study of administrative law has a long history dating back more than 200 years. It has enjoyed a renaissance in the past 15 years or so and now sits alongside fields such as comparative constitutional law and global administrative law as a well-established area of scholarly research. This book is the first to provide a broad and systematic view of the subject both in terms of the topics covered and the legal traditions surveyed. In its various parts it surveys the historical beginnings of comparative administrative law scholarship, discusses important methodological issues, examines the relationship between administrative law and regime type, analyses basic concepts such as 'administrative power' and 'accountability', and deals with the creation, functions, and control of administrative power, and values of administration. The final part looks to the future of this young sub-discipline.
     In this volume, distinguished experts and leaders in the field discuss a wide range of issues in administrative law from a comparative perspective. Administrative law is concerned with the conferral, nature, exercise, and legal control of administrative (or 'executive') governmental power. It has close links with other areas of 'public law', notably constitutional law and international law. It is of great interest and importance not only to lawyers but also to students of politics, government, and public policy. Studying public law comparatively helps to identify both similarities and differences between the way government power and its control is managed in different countries and legal traditions.
    HKU Law colleagues contributed to three chapters of this important work co-edited by Eric Ip: Ch 4 "A Chinese Tradition" by Albert Chen, Ch 14 "Parliamentary Regimes" by Eric Ip, and Ch 17 "Authoritarian Regimes" by Po Jen Yap.

Tuesday, December 22, 2020

Legal Implications of China's Space and Moon Missions (Interview with Prof Yun Zhao)

China's Chang'e 5 space capsule returned to Earth on 16 December 2020, bringing back a sample of rocks and dust from the Moon all according to plan. HKU Legal Scholarship Blog asked our own resident space law expert, Dr Yun Zhao, who holds the Henry Cheng Professorship in Interational Law and serves as Head of the Department of Law, to explain some of the legal implications of the Chinese Lunar Exploration Programme.

(1) What are three basic principles of space law to help us understand the legal implications of China's recent space mission to the Moon?
Three basic principles defined in the 1967 Outer Space Treaty are: 1) The freedom of exploration and use of outer space (for the benefit and in the interests of all countries) (Art. I); 2) Non-appropriation principle (outer space is not subject to national appropriation) (Art. II); 3) peaceful uses of outer space (Art. VI).

Credit: Simona Young
(2) The Chang'e 5 returner brought back close to 2 kg of Moon rocks and dust ("Moon samples") for analysis. Who owns these Moon samples?
The non-appropriation principle prohibits national appropriation of outer space, including the Moon and other celestial bodies by claim of sovereignty, by means of use or occupation, or by any other means. The ownership issue has not been dealt with by any existing space treaties. However, it is helpful to make reference to the Moon Agreement (China and other major space-faring nations are not yet Members to this Agreement). Art 6.2 provides that 
“In carrying out scientific investigations and in furtherance of the provisions of this Agreement, the State Parties shall have the right to collect on and remove from the moon samples of its mineral and other substances. Such samples shall remain at the disposal of those State Parties which cause them to be collected and may be used by them for scientific purposes. States Parties shall have regard to the desirability of making a portion of such samples available to other interested States Parties and the international scientific community for scientific investigation. States Parties may in the course of scientific investigations also use mineral and other substances of the moon in quantities appropriate for the support of their missions.”

(3) At the press conference on 17 December 2020, it is reported the deputy director of the China National Space Administration said China would share the moon samples with scientists around the world. Is there any legal obligation on China to honour this promise to share the moon samples?
Article 6.2 of the Moon Agreement is the only legal source and no customary rules exist on this issue; the wording of this Article shows that sharing of the moon samples is not compulsory. It should also be borne in mind that China is not yet a State Party to the Moon Agreement.

(4) To what extent do patent laws apply to these moon samples? For example, what if scientists in Hong Kong develop new instruments or technologies to analyze these samples, can these new instruments and technologies be patented?
It is argued that patent laws do not apply to the moon samples per se. The moon samples, a kind of discovery, have nothing to do with invention/creation and thus do not fall within the scope for patent protection. But it is possible to patent new instruments or technologies (satisfying the element of creativity/originality) in accordance with national patent laws or international patent treaties. Scientists in Hong Kong developing new instruments or technologies may apply for patent protection in accordance with the Patents Ordinance (Cap 514). Relevant provisions include Part 1A, Division 1, Article 9A on patentable invention (if it is new, involves an inventive step; and is susceptible of industrial application).

(5) China is planning to establish an international research station on the moon by 2030. Are there any laws governing where it can set up this research station? Can China claim land rights on the area it has chosen to establish its research station?
The 1967 Outer Space Treaty is the most relevant document. In accordance with the non-appropriation principle, China cannot claim land rights on the space. Article XII of the Outer Space Treaty provides that 
“All stations, installations, equipment and space vehicles on the moon and other celestial bodies shall be open to representatives of other States Parties to the Treaty on a basis of reciprocity. Such representatives shall give reasonable advance notice of a projected visit, in order that appropriate consultations may be held and that maximum precautions may be taken to assure safety and to avoid interference with normal operations in the facility to be visited.”

(6) On previous missions, China has left various objects on the moon including the Yutu rover. Are these objects considered abandoned property which anyone can now claim on the basis of 'finders keepers'?
Such objects should not be considered abandoned property which anyone can claim. Article VIII of the Outer Space Treaty provides that 
“A State Party to the Treaty on whose registry an object launched into outer space is carried shall retain jurisdiction and control over such object, and over any personnel thereof, while in outer space or on a celestial body. Ownership of objects launched into outer space, including objects landed or constructed on a celestial body, and of their component parts, is not affected by their presence in outer space or on a celestial body or by their return to the Earth. Such objects or component parts found beyond the limits of the State Party to the Treaty on whose registry they are carried shall be returned to that State Party, which shall, upon request, furnish identifying data prior to their return.”

Credit: Simona Young
(7) Would the answers to the above questions be any different if a private enterprise was engaging in similar moon explorations? For example, would a private company have any stronger property interest claims over samples extracted from the Moon or to territory occupied?
The answer would be the same. Article VI of the Outer Space Treaty provides that States Parties shall bear international responsibility for national space activities, whether such activities are carried on by governmental agencies or by non-governmental entities, and for assuring that national activities are carried out in conformity with the provisions set forth in the treaty. This provision further requires authorization and continuing supervision of the space activities of non-governmental entities by the appropriate State Party. 

(8) To what extent do national laws apply to things that happen in space or on the Moon? For example, do you know of any countries' criminal laws or civil laws applying to conduct occurring in space or on the Moon?
National space law or space-related laws (such as telecommunications law, remote sensing laws) shall apply to things or activities that happen in outer space. There are possibilities of applying other general laws (such as criminal laws or civil laws) to things or activities in outer space. A State should normally have personal jurisdiction over its own nationals. Moreover, Article VIII of the Outer Space Treaty provides for the retention of jurisdiction and control over space object and personnel thereof. This implies the possibility of applying national laws to the things or activities happening within the specific space object. However, this quasi-territorial jurisdiction is not ostensibly pronounced in the field of space law. The only relevant document is the International Space Station Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) (1998). Article 5 states that each Partner shall retain jurisdiction and control over the elements it registers and over personnel in or on the Space Station who are its nationals. Article 22 deals with criminal jurisdiction, that the Partner States may exercise criminal jurisdiction over personnel in or on any flight element who are their respective nationals; an affected Partner State may exercise criminal jurisdiction over the alleged perpetrator who is not its national subject to certain conditions. 

(9) Can a country enact a law to enable the country to claim or confer rights to things that exist on the Moon? For example, can country X pass a law that says nationals of country X may have property rights to anything which those nationals extract from the Moon? 
It is possible for a country to enable its own nationals (not the country per se) to claim rights to things that exist on the moon. After the United States adopted the U.S. Commercial Space Launch Competitiveness Act on 25 November 2015, the International Institute of Space Law (IISL) released a Position Paper in December 2015. The document emphasizes the importance of the non-appropriation principle; however, it acknowledges that there is no international agreement governing whether the right of “free use” includes the right to take and consume non-renewable natural resources in outer space. Accordingly, the United States has not violated its international legal obligations. The IISL questions whether this legal situation is satisfactory. Another country that has adopted a similar national law is Luxembourg.

(10) Would such a domestic law, as described in Q(9), violate international law? Does China have such laws?
As mentioned in A(9), there is no violation of international law. China does not have such laws.

Monday, December 21, 2020

International Conference: Data Sovereignty along the Digital Silk Road (6-7 Jan 2021 on Zoom)

Data Sovereignty along the Digital Silk Road

Date: January 6 – 7, 2021 (Wednesday – Thursday)
Time: 8am – 12pm (US Eastern Standard Time)

This conference is co-organized by the Law and Technology Centre of the University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law and the Institute for Technology Law & Policy of the Georgetown University Law Center. It will be conducted via Zoom and prior registration is required. More information is available from the conference website: https://www.datasovereignty.hku.hk/.

Keynote Speakers:
Frank Pasquale, Professor of Law, Brooklyn Law School
Mark Wu, Henry L. Stimson Professor and the Vice Dean for the Graduate Program and International Legal Studies, Harvard Law School

Panel Speakers & Moderators:
Susan Aaronson, Research Professor & Director of the Digital Trade and Data Governance Hub, George Washington University Elliott School of International Affairs
Douglas Arner, Kerry Holdings Professor in Law, University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law
Mira Burri, Managing Director Steering Committee Internationalisation (SCI) & Senior Lecturer, University of Lucerne Faculty of Law
Anupam Chander, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center
Anne Cheung, Professor of Law & Co-Director of the Law and Technology Centre, University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law
Théodore Christakis, Professor of International and European Law, Université Grenoble Alpes
Julie Cohen, Mark Claster Mamolen Professor of Law and Technology, Georgetown University Law Center
Jennifer Daskal, Professor of Law & Faculty Director, Tech, Law & Security Program, American University Washington College of Law
Henry Gao, Associate Professor of Law, Singapore Management University School of Law
Graham Greenleaf, Professor of Law & Information Systems, Faculty of Law, University of New South Wales
Lizhi Liu, Assistant Professor, Georgetown University‎ McDonough School of Business
Neha Mishra, Lecturer in Law, Australian National University
Kyung-Sin Park, Professor of Law, Korea University Law School; Open Net Korea
Shin-yi Peng, Distinguished Professor of Law, National Tsing Hua University
Thomas Streinz, Adjunct Professor of Law & Executive Director, Guarini Global Law & Tech, New York University School of Law
Haochen Sun, Associate Professor of Law, University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law
Dan Svantesson, Professor of Law & Co-Director, Centre for Commercial Law, Bond University Faculty of Law
Andrew Woods, Professor of Law, University of Arizona College of Law

All are welcome! Please register as soon as possible at https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1WARJ4wtlnSmJR_hR9vVfc6sNS9eGzY-K70env7Dskys/viewform?edit_requested=true. The link to the Zoom webinar will be provided upon successful registration.

Please direct any inquiries to Ms. Grace Chan at mcgrace@hku.hk or (+852) 3917 4727.

Richard Cullen on Reforming LegCo Rules of Procedure to Ensure Meaningful Debates (China Daily)

21 December 2020
A recent striking change in Hong Kong’s TV programming is the transformation of Legislative Council broadcasts. Where previously we tuned in to recurring episodes of “clown hall” we now find ourselves viewing comparatively calm and serious discussion. Gone are the unbecoming stunts of fruit and paper throwing and political posturing, interspersed with rowdy pushing and shoving, including instances of brazen physical intimidation: More boring, yes, but a welcome switch and a return to normalcy.
     But we have also lost realistic counter-arguments from opposition members in the LegCo chamber. These were often fiery and sometimes knee-jerk but they could shine a sharp light when the opposition chose to engage in serious debate. Almost all those members have now gone, following the four members who were disqualified out the door. Opposition politicians have repeatedly allowed fervor to take over from good sense. They have done so again with this walkout.
     In fact, we need to see a return of robust debates once the delayed LegCo elections are held. We do not, however, need a return to the juvenile continuous disruptions and gratuitous hostilities that marked LegCo as the most dysfunctional governance institution in the HKSAR over the last decade... Click here to read the full text.

Sunday, December 20, 2020

Patricia Ho Sounds Alarm Bells with Hong Kong's Immigration (Amendment) Bill 2020

Patricia Ho examines the immigration amendment bill, which was gazetted on 4 December 2020, and outlines the potential harmful consequences for those seeking asylum in Hong Kong

Alarm Bells Rung by the Immigration (Amendment) Bill 2020

The Immigration (Amendment) Bill 2020 ("Bill") was recently published with the aim to improve the efficiency of the screening procedures of non-refoulement claims and introduce enhanced measures in respect of law enforcement and detention of asylum seekers. It seeks to tackle problems such as unlawful employment and “delaying tactics” adopted by asylum seekers. However, the proposed amendments have drawn criticisms from civil society concerned with the human rights of this vulnerable population. Upon an initial review of the Bill, it seems likely that some of the proposed amendments contravene the Hong Kong Bill of Rights and leading jurisprudence in this space, let alone international treaty obligations. More generally, it sends a message the authorities are taking a hostile approach in devising policies and laws regarding asylum seekers. 
     Let us first have a look at the proposed procedural reforms of the screening mechanism. It is known the success rates of the screening performed by the Immigration Department is strikingly low. Multiple judicial reviews highlighting faulty decisions have brought to light the poor quality of decisions. This background makes it a concern that proposed amendments place a heavy onus on the claimant to lodge all their evidence relating to the claim within 7 days after they file their appeal. Claimants only have 14 days to lodge their appeals during which many have to look for legal representation which can be a difficult process. Many may depend on the help of pro bono counsel or NGOs who do not usually have the resources to do this work speedily. On appeals, many claimants will try to obtain expert evidence which will require more time. It will be a serious fault in the process if claimants are unable to submit expert evidence owing to this restriction. Another small but notable procedural change is that claimants will not be considered to have lodged an appeal if there are minor procedural inadequacies in their appeal forms such as a failure to sign their name. This unreasonable emphasis on formality, expressly allowing no exceptions, is particularly unsuitable for an often vulnerable group of claimants. 
     The most disconcerting procedural reform is the proposed permission given to immigration officers and appeal board adjudicators to require a claimant to go through with their proceedings in a language other than the one they requested so long as they “reasonably consider” that the claimant or the witness “is able to understand and communicate in it”. No guidance is given to how officers or adjudicators may reach such conclusions, so one must question how they can do so when they would presumably not be able to communicate with the claimants in the first place. This seems to create a broad range of possible procedural unfairness, which surely will defeat the Immigration Department’s agenda to streamline the process when their processes can prima facie be amenable to judicial review. 
     Perhaps the most problematic part of the proposed reforms lies in the strengthening of the basis for immigration detention. The Bill allows factors such as “number of persons pending removal from Hong Kong”, and “manpower and resources constraints” to be taken into account when deciding whether the period of detention is lawful. It intentionally prolongs detention based on administrative and bureaucratic inefficiency. This obviously contravenes the Hardial Singh principles which stressed that the period of detention is only justified for a reasonable period, which is a matter to be determined by courts. The authorities must act with reasonable diligence and expedition to effect removal (one must query why they do not focus reforms on the efficiency of the administration). The proposals contravene the clear and established principle that immigration detention must be applied as an exceptional measure of last resort, for the shortest period, and only if justified by legitimate purpose. 
     An issue that raises the loudest alarm is the arming of officers at the Castle Peak Bay Immigration Center (“CIC”). The Bill authorizes immigration officers to possess firearms and offensive weapons including pepper spray, steel batons and baton guns without prior consent from the Commissioner of Police. Bearing in mind that immigration detention is an administrative function, not a penal one, this development reinforces the portrayal of refugees and asylum seekers as ‘criminals’. There are already reports exposing the use of punitive solitary confinement and strip searches in CIC. With the lack of an effective complaints and monitoring system, the chance of disproportionate use of force and abuse is further escalated. At the root of this escalation of hostility is the fact that CIC is manned by the Immigration Department and not the Correctional Services Department. There is an issue that the party seeking to remove individuals detained is the same as the one imposing detention terms and conditions. This conflict of interest should be addressed. 
     The above is by no means an exhaustive list of the proposed amendments or the potential problems arising from them. It is hoped in the coming months some meaningful debate will ensue in the Legislative Council that will lead the government to take into account the concerns of civil society and reconsider their proposals. 
     One would not normally take issue with reforms to streamline or speed up an assessment system for refugees; however, if the means to achieve this aim will strip the basic protections of the rights of claimants then the legal community at large should be concerned. Reforms to improve efficiency in this regard must always be in line with the high standards of fairness set down by our courts, reflecting those set out in international instruments. 

Douglas Arner et al on Stablecoins: Risks, Potential and Regulation (BIS Working Paper)

"Stablecoins: risks, potential and regulation"
Douglas Arner, Raphael Auer and Jon Frost
BIS Working Papers No 905
November 2020
Abstract: The technologies underlying money and payment systems are evolving rapidly. Both the emergence of distributed ledger technology (DLT) and rapid advances in traditional centralised systems are moving the technological horizon of money and payments. These trends are embodied in private “stablecoins”: cryptocurrencies with values tied to fiat currencies or other assets. Stablecoins – in particular potential “global stablecoins” such as Facebook’s Libra proposal – pose a range of challenges from the standpoint of financial authorities around the world. At the same time, regulatory responses to global stablecoins should take into account the potential of other stablecoin uses, such as embedding a robust monetary instrument into digital environments, especially in the context of decentralised systems. Looking forward, in such cases, one possible option from a regulatory standpoint is to embed supervisory requirements into stablecoin systems themselves, allowing for “embedded supervision”. Yet it is an open question whether central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) and other initiatives could in fact provide more effective solutions to fulfil the functions that stablecoins are meant to address. Click here to download the full paper.

Syren Johnstone on Exploring the Impact of Regulations on the Crypto-Asset Space (OAX Foundation)

12 November 2020
How Financial Regulation Has Altered The Crypto-Asset Landscape
Over the last few years I’ve been writing on this topic I’ve found myself asking three questions. Where is the regulation of crypto-assets heading? What are the implications of that direction for development of the technology? Are there alternatives?
Directions
In July 2017, things changed. The U.S. SEC had identified The DAO as an investment contract subject to securities laws. Although the U.S. CFTC had indicated in 2015 it regarded Bitcoin as subject to commodities laws, the SEC’s report was the marker buoy that chartered a new course. By early 2018 everyone from the BIS, to the FSB to the IMF were assembling their views on the growing interactions with the global financial system. ICOs morphed into STOs. Jurisdictions started thinking about their own laws: apply, develop or expand.
     Policy-makers had few other tools than to apply financial regulation. The adoption of an incrementalist approach based on pre-existing regulatory constructs resulted in “fit-to-existing-regulation” (FER) taxonomies that fitted all crypto-assets into existing regulatory silos. Problem solved.
   Except it wasn’t. Tokens could take on different characteristics at different times, or could simultaneously fit into all FER categories. Various premises of securities regulation don’t apply particularly well to crypto-assets. This ranges from assumptions about accountability and institutional arrangements to the utility of product siloing and how markets can be regulated. Labelling a token as a security doesn’t mean that granular rules developed for traditional securities can be sensibly applied. While questions must be asked about the sustainability of applying securities regulation, regulatory bodies globally have set a course that applies the language and strategies of FER taxonomies and the securities market to crypto-assets.
Implications
The shift to STOs changed the way technologists raise development capital. But it also had an impact on the development of the technology itself because it represents a significant redesign of the notion of a token – what it is, does or might one day be capable of doing. The SAFT structure might have been a workaround but now looks untenable.
     Applying securities law reinforced the traditional corporatized relationship, and centralized barrier, between an issuer and the providers of capital whose interests become limited to the prospect of a financial return. It may also have inadvertently bolstered an existing interest in crypto-assets as speculative investments. Certainly, the much broader concept of disintermediated economics has been shifted to the production of an array of essentially financial products built around a financial capital model, as witnessed by the growth of DeFi.
     Consequently, other uses of the technology that have been proposed or thought of lag in terms of development and implementation. The deficiency of exploration leaves an almost existential uncertainty about the wholly different business models that may be possible. For example, such as those that might be built around open data networks that promote shared value creation - because the underlying network is an open database that anyone can build on, value is primarily created from products and services that do not rely on exclusively owned proprietary data protected by intellectual property laws.
    This has had an obvious effect on ecosystem development. Non-financial iterations of the technology face survival challenges in an environment that is determined by the prevailing political, economic and regulation infrastructure, which is heavily coloured by extant financial frameworks... Click here to read the full text. 

Syren Johnstone Interviewed on Tightening Regulation of Crypto Assets and Exchanges (Cointelegraph)

"FUD or regulatory change? Rumor clouds swirl around crypto exchanges"
Andrew Singer
9 November 2020
The mood of fear, uncertainty and doubt, otherwise known as FUD, that has gripped some of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges since October heightened last week — and it had nothing to do with the United States presidential election.
...
An increasing likelihood of enforcement?
But maybe there is a method to all this “FUDiness.” Syren Johnstone, who is executive director of the compliance and regulation program at the University of Hong Kong and has written about regulating crypto exchanges, suggested to Cointelegraph that the global regulatory pendulum is swinging in the direction of tighter control:
“In Hong Kong the government this week proposed to bring all crypto-assets under the oversight of the securities regulator by using money laundering concerns as the stepping stone. Legislation has been proposed in the EU and the U.S. that drives crypto-assets into existing regulatory silos. These actions indicate the wind has definitely changed direction — [while] strengthened regulatory mandates increases the likelihood of enforcement.”

...  Click here to read the full text.

Friday, December 18, 2020

HKU Law Teachers Recognised by Teaching Excellence Awards 2020

Three HKU Law teachers were recognised in the 2020 HKU Teaching Excellence Awards for individual and group efforts.  Congratulations to the following colleagues:
  • Ms Lindsay Ernst won the Outstanding Teaching Team Award (OTA) with  Mr David L Bishop of the Faculty of Business and Economics for EmpowerU: A cross-disciplinary, community-led, impact-based teaching and learning platform.  The initiative aims to connect domestic workers with opportunities to learn from top education partners, including NGOs, companies, and top university professors. Currently, Lindsay is a Co-Director of the LLM  in Human Rights Programme and Lecturer in Human Rights Experiential Learning. Lindsay specialises in developing interdisciplinary experiential learning opportunities focused on advancing social justice and human rights. Her areas of interest are community legal education and empowerment, migration, children’s rights, disability rights, and clinical legal education.
  • Dr Anya M Adair, co-appointed in the School of English, Faculty of Arts, and Department of Law, Faculty of Law, won the Early Career Teaching Award (ECTA). Anya is Assistant Professor in Law and Humanities. Anya’s research centres on medieval English law and legal culture, as well as pre-modern English literature. Her focus is the early medieval period (c.550-1200), but her research extends also to Old Norse and Anglo-Latin, medieval language interaction, book history and manuscript studies, poetry and poetics, digital humanities, and the history of the English language. Her present research seeks to unite more closely the fields of medieval law and medieval literature, and to provide insight into the intellectual, emotional and social dimensions of legal and literary production across the period. Her interest in legal and literary culture takes her work into the history of emotion, historical linguistics, religious writing, poetry, poetics and rhetoric, as well as palaeography, codicology, and the history of law.  Currently, the two courses she is teaching are Introduction to Law and Literary Studies, and The Beginnings of English Law and Literature.
  • Professor Douglas W Arner won the Teaching Innovation Team Award (TIA).  Douglas collaborated with  Mr David Bishop of the Faculty of Business and Economics, Mr David S Lee of Faculty of Business and Economics, Ms. Ellen Seto of Technology-Enriched Learning Initiative and Professor Siu-ming Yiu of the Faculty of Engineering to develop HKU edX Professional Certificate Programme in FinTech. This program is designed for those working in finance, technology, regulation or FinTech, those studying related subjects, or those just interested in learning more about one of the most exciting processes underway today. Each course brings together leading experts in FinTech from a range of backgrounds, including professors, market professionals and entrepreneurs. Designed by leading academics from a range of disciplines with input from industry leaders including among others SuperCharger, the Centre for Finance, Technology and Entrepreneurship, Microsoft, PwC and the Asia Capital Markets Institute, each course provides the tools necessary to transform one’s own future in FinTech. Remarkably, this programme is now nominated for the 2020 edX Prize.
The Teaching Excellence Awards Scheme (TEAS) aims to recognise, reward and promote excellence in teaching at the University. Under the Scheme, there are four categories of awards, i.e. University Distinguished Teaching Award, Outstanding Teaching Award (OTA), Early Career Teaching Award (ECTA) and Teaching Innovation Award (TIA). Besides individual awards, both OTA and TIA comprise team awards to recognise and encourage collaborative effort and achievement in enhancing teaching and learning.  We are pleased to see Faculty of Law colleagues obtaining awards in three of these categories this year. Click here to view the list of 2020 TEAS Winners.

Wednesday, December 16, 2020

HKU LAW Launches New Junior Academic Fellowships

HKU LAW Junior Academic Fellows: Call for Applications

HKU Faculty of Law has established a pre-doctoral fellowship to be awarded to law graduates in and from Hong Kong who have recently obtained a master degree in law from a leading international law school. Recipients of the fellowship will serve as a junior academic fellow in the Faculty of Law for up to one year with a competitive salary, during which they will be required to perform limited teaching duties. The fellows are expected to devote their time primarily to securing a place in a doctorate degree programme at a top global law school. Depending on whether they secure a scholarship elsewhere for their doctoral study, fellows may be awarded a scholarship under this fellowship programme towards the cost of their doctoral study. This is a highly competitive new initiative of the Faculty of Law designed to identify academic talent with strong potential for success in doctoral studies. No more than two successful candidates will be selected each year.
     Interested candidates may send their CV and a personal statement to coria@hku.hk. Applications will be considered on a rolling basis.

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Do Judges Run Prisons? (Henry Litton)

DO JUDGES RUN PRISONS? 
Henry Litton

The Scenario
In Hong Kong there are male prisons, and there are female prisons. There are no mixed prisons. The disciplinary regime in each is different, for obvious reasons.

The Disciplinary Rules
As regards hair style, this is what the Prison Rule says about male prisoners:
The hair of all male convicted prisoners will be kept cut sufficiently close, but not close cropped, for the purpose of health and cleanliness, unless the prisoner himself requests it”. 
But for female prisoners it is different. The rule says:
Upon request, female prisoners will have their hair cut especially before discharge or production in court. Except as recommended by MO [Medical Officer] a female prisoner’s hair shall not be cut shorter than the style on admission without her consent.” 
These two rules are set out in the Standing Orders for prisons, but grouped together in SO 41-05. However presented, they are clearly different rules.
      Another Prison Rule requires the Chief Officer to ensure that male prisoners’ clothing is kept in a good state of repair, and “their hair kept trimmed, and their washing, hair clipping and personal ablution attended to”. 
     Then Prison Rule 34, regarding general treatment of all prisoners, says:
Every prisoner shall obey such directions as regards washing, bathing, shaving and hair cutting as may from time to time be prescribed”. 
The “Long Hair” case
In March 2012 Leung Kwok Hung (also known as “Long Hair”) was convicted before a magistrate of criminal charges. In June 2014, after an appeal, he was required to serve a sentence of four weeks imprisonment. This he did at the Lai Chi Kok Reception Centre. On admission he objected to having his hair cut short and said he might apply for judicial review to challenge such requirement. After ascertaining that no application had been made, the Chief Officer authorized the hair-cutting to proceed. That was done. 
     Leung subsequently did apply for leave to start judicial review proceedings: Hence the case Leung Kwok Hung aka “Long Hair” v Commissioner for Correctional Services [HCAL 109/2014] heard by Au J in April and May 2015.
     In a 39-page judgment handed down 1.5 years later, he made the following orders:
(1) A declaration that the rule for male prisoners constituted “direct sex discrimination under s.5 of the Sex Discrimination Ordinance and was made unlawful under s.38(1) of the Ordinance; or alternatively the rule violated Article 25 of the Basic Law and was unlawful”. 
(2) An order to quash the Chief Officer’s decision to enforce the rule.
Statutory Offence 
The offence of sex discrimination is a pure creature of statute. The common law knew nothing of such offence.
     Before WWII, there was not a single female judge on the Bench anywhere in England. The common law gave no redress for sex discrimination. It was not the common law judges but legislators who, bit by bit, came to realize that this was an ethical issue.
     It follows, as night follows day, that the ingredients of such offence are to be found in the statute itself. Nowhere else.
     The Hong Kong Sex Discrimination Ordinance was first enacted in May 1996. Its long title says that it is an Ordinance to render unlawful “certain kinds of sex discrimination ….”. There then follows many different kinds of discrimination. For example:
  • Discrimination by way of victimization: s. 9
  • Discrimination by employers against contract workers: s. 13
  • Discrimination by barristers: s. 36.
  • Governmental discrimination: s.38(1).
Section 5(1)(a) 
Here, the judge held that the rule concerning male hair-style in prison was what he called “direct discrimination”, as defined in s.5(1)(a). That section, taken together with s. 6 and s.38(1) reads thus:
'The Commissioner discriminates against a man in any circumstances relevant for the purposes of any provision of this Ordinance if, on the ground of his sex, he treats him less favourably than he treats a woman' 
Note the words: “in any circumstances relevant for the purposes of any provision of this Ordinance”. 
     The statutory 'purpose' in this case is the prohibition in s.38(1) which makes it unlawful for the government, in the exercise of its functions, to discriminate against Leung Kwok Hung.
     But what were the relevant circumstances? They were those in a male prison. The prison regime relevant in a male prison does not apply in a female prison, for obvious reasons. And vice-versa. In judging whether s.5(1)(a) is engaged in a case concerning male prisoners, comparison with circumstances in a female prison is not relevant.
     If there be any doubt about this, it would be dispelled by s.10 which says:
A comparison of the cases of different sex under s. 5(1) ….shall be such that the relevant circumstances in the one case are the same, or not materially different, in the other.” 
     Any ordinary person, not learned in the law, would have found this a matter of plain common sense. In life, there is no ethical framework that transcends context. Ethical values are not free-standing. When someone says: 'This is sex discrimination', that statement has no meaning unless you know the context in which it is said.
     The Sex Discrimination Ordinance was simply not engaged in this case. End of story.

How Did the Judge Get To The Result He Did? 
The judge identified “three types of discrimination”: Direct, indirect and Thlimmenos discrimination. These are labels used in overseas case law. The term Thlimminos discrimination came from a case of that name decided in the European Court of Human Rights.  The expression “direct discrimination” identified the kind of discrimination set out in s. 5(1)(a). 
     Au J, instead of focussing on the words in the Hong Kong statute, got totally entangled in overseas case law concerning “direct discrimination”, as if this was a generic term detached from its statutory roots. He never focussed on the simple words in s.5(1)(a).
     Before Au J, the exercise in court seemed like a running dialogue between Bench and Bar, with case after case being dissected and discussed.
     For instance in para. 56 of his judgment one finds this sentence:
The Gillan Case therefore does not support Mr Pao’s submissions questioning the correctness of the Roma Case.” 
Mr Pao was counsel for the Commissioner. Why was he questioning the correctness of the Roma Case ? Right or wrong, what purpose did that serve? 
     The running dialogue on these two cases began in para.44 of the judgment where the facts of the Roma Case were set out. They involved immigration control at the Prague airport for those seeking entry into the UK. The Gillan Case concerned police powers of stop and search in the UK. How these cases elucidated the meaning of the Hong Kong statute on sex discrimination was not explained.
     After the conclusion on those two cases reached in para 56, one sees many more paragraphs in the judgment where other overseas cases were discussed, ending with para 98:
For all the above reasons, I reject the Commissioner’s arguments and conclude that SO 41-05 and the Decision amount to direct sex discrimination and are thus unlawful”.
The “above reasons” were set out in about 20 pages of fine print. Few can understand them, however elevated their level of English.

The Common Man’s Perspective 
Overseas case law would be a complete mystery to the ordinary citizen.  But if one simply focussed attention on the words “circumstances relevant for the purposes ….of this Ordinance”, that would have coincided with the way an ordinary person would have approached the matter. The question of discrimination would have been put in the right context: That is to say, custodial discipline in a male prison.
     The common man would have said: 'what is the fuss all about? Are you saying that the female rules should apply in a male prison ?' And he might even have added: 'Are the judges now going to run prisons as well?'
     Furthermore, the ordinary person would not have agonized over whether, under the rules, a male inmate was being treated “less favourably” than a female inmate. He would have realized that the matter was one of custodial discipline, within the Commissioner’s responsibilities; uniformity and conformity among inmates was important as part of the correctional process. But females were not the inmates under consideration.
     Adopting such an approach the judgment would not have been more than a couple of pages long and would have been easily understood by the ordinary citizen. 

Article 25 Basic Law
As regards whether the rule concerning prison hair-style offended Article 25 of the Basic Law, the ordinary man would have shaken his head in total disbelief at the judge’s conclusion.
     Article 25 simply says: “All Hong Kong residents shall be equal before the law”. Full stop.  The notion that, under the principle of One Country Two Systems, Article 25 of the Basic Law could be engaged in a case like this is alarming.
     The Basic Law is a constitutional document, setting out the general framework for the Region. It is not a civil code for regulating Hong Kong’s daily affairs: And certainly not for regulating the way prisons should be run.

The Court of Appeal 
The Commissioner appealed. The Court of Appeal gave judgment in April 2018.
      The Chief Judge did not write the leading judgment. This was left to Lam VP. But the Chief Judge did set the tone. He began his judgment by saying:
Discrimination is a huge subject that has generated a tremendous amount of literature and debate. It straddles many disciplines and law is just one of them.” 
With such an approach it was inevitable that the judgments amounted to pages and pages of fine print, totally unintelligible to the ordinary person.
     As it was, the Court of Appeal, after tripping through many of the same cases as the judge, came to the opposite conclusion: that Au J had erred on both counts: that is to say, the application of s.5(1)(a) to the facts of the case, and his reliance on Article 25 of the Basic Law.  Au J’s judgment was quashed.

Court of Final Appeal
Leung Kwok Hung in turn lodged an appeal. This was heard by the Court of Final Appeal ( CFA ) in October 2020. Its judgment handed down on 27 November 2020 must have shocked the community. It overturned the Court of Appeal’s judgment. Au J’s judgment was restored.
     The Chief Justice delivered the only judgment, with which the other four judges agreed.  He began his judgment by saying that a “4-step approach contained in the speech of Baroness Hale of Richmond in R (European Roma Rights v The Prague Immigration Office [2005 ] 2 AC 1 at para 73 is helpful”. 
     That immediately raises the question: “Helpful” as to what? Is the wording in s.5(1)(a) not clear enough? At any rate, these are the 4-steps.

“4-Step Approach” 
“15 (1) There must be a difference in treatment between one person ……and another person, real or hypothetical, from a different sex group, the compared person ( in our case, female prisoners ).

(2) The relevant circumstances between the complainant and the compared person are the same or at least not materially different.

(3) It must then be shown that the treatment given to the complainant is less favourable than that given to the compared person.

(4) The difference in treatment is on the basis of sex.”
      As to 15(1), the Chief Justice said that male prisoners did not “have the choice as regards hair-style that female prisoners had”, which of course is right.

The Relevant Circumstances” 
As to 15(2), the Chief Justice said: “…it is important to compare like with like and to view the matter in proper context”. That again is correct, and one would have expected the judgment then to examine the question: What is the proper context ? Is the court being asked to compare like with like ?
     But not at all. The judgment immediately moved on to 15(3): What constitutes “less favourable treatment”.

Less Favourable Treatment
There then followed 11 pages of text examining a whole range of overseas cases dealing with a variety of situations: Selection requirements for secondary schools Birmingham City Council v Equal Opportunities Commission; length of hair in schools Re McMillan; rub down searches in prisons R ( on the Application of James Dowell v Secretary of State for Justice and Conway v Canada; dress and appearance code in a supermarket Smith v Safeway; what constitutes presenting a clean and tidy appearance and to dress in a business-like way in a book shop Department for Works and Pensions v Thompson.
      Those eleven pages were under the heading “Less favourable treatment”. Whether someone has been treated “equally” or “less favourably” can only be examined in the actual context of the case. It is not an abstract exercise. A hundred citations of cases dealing with different situations will yield no answer.  What is more, “equality”, “less favourable treatment” are elusive concepts.
     One argument put up on the Commissioner’s behalf was this: the requirement imposed on Leung Kwok Hung was no more than the conventional hair-style of the majority of males in Hong Kong. That requirement was uniformly applied in a male prison: to de-emphasise individuality In the interests of custodial discipline. That is plain common sense.
     But, whilst accepting the need for custodial discipline, the Chief Justice, astonishingly, said this in para 52:
….no details are provided and no basis is given for saying that in our society, the conventional hairstyle for men is a short one whereas for women hair can be long or short. There must be sufficient evidence going to these matters; they cannot simply be asserted ….
Sadly, the court appears to dwell in a world of words, detached from reality on the ground.
     In the Chief Justice’s view, the “less favourable treatment” rested on the fact that a female prisoner, on admission, was allowed to keep her hairstyle even if it was long, whereas a male could not. But factually, the Chief Justice was not entirely correct. The female was also under some limitation. Her choice was not unrestrained. If the Medical Office required her hair to be cut, then under the Prison Rules she had to comply.
     In the two courts below, the judges looked at the concept of “less favourable treatment” through the lens of cases dealing with a diversity of situations and came to opposite conclusions. The reason why it is so difficult to nail down that concept is because the context in which it was being considered was missing. 
     The Commissioner was the respondent to these judicial review proceedings. Were he to be asked: 'what is this case all about', his reply would surely have been 'about custodial discipline in a male prison'.
     In this context, the problem of “less favourable treatment” disappears. The comparison with the female regime was simply not relevant.

Article 25 of the Basic Law 
In para 56 the judgment said this:
In view of the conclusion reached on the previous issue, it is unnecessary to deal with this issue. However, on the facts of the present case, the outcome would not be different under Article 25 of the Basic Law.
This seemingly throwaway line contains a most sinister seed.
     What the Chief Justice was saying, in effect, was this: Were the challenge to the prison rule to be judged, not by applying the Sex Discrimination Ordinance, but by applying Article 25 of the Basic Law, the result would have been the same.
     In other words, he would have interpreted Article 25 of the Basic Law as applicable to strike down the prison rule: raising, in effect, a purely local matter to the State level. This was an open invitation to lawyers to play games with the Basic Law, regardless of the consequences.

Transparency 
The Chief Justice, in answer to general criticisms of the Judiciary, issued a statement on 23 September in which he said (para 29):
The community is able to see for itself and verify whether fundamental principles are followed by the courts by observing court proceedings ………and reading the judgments of the courts at all levels to see precisely the reasons why a court has arrived at a determination …..Open justice and transparency enable the community to observe the judicial process in full, and to provide meaningful and informed comments and criticisms”. 
Unhappily, this judgment is anything but transparent.
     It deals essentially with an ethical issue, made into an offence by a local statute. Any judgment on such an issue should be understood by every educated person. Yet this judgment, and those in the courts below, are so dense with “law” that no-one can possibly understand them, however elevated their standard of English.

Limits of Courts’ Powers 
In a case such as this, which essentially concerns management of male prisons, a court should approach the matter with hesitancy and diffidence. The Commissioner has expertise which judges do not share. The standards of behaviour are set by the Commissioner. Such standards fall naturally within a broad spectrum. If judges expect the community to respect the norms and values set by them, they in turn must show respect for those set by other institutions of government. Judges have no monopoly on ethical standards set in society.

What has this judgment achieved? 
The undoubted effect of the CFA’s judgment is that discipline in male prisons must now be relaxed as regards hairstyle. There will be repercussions. What follow-on impact this might have on custodial discipline as a whole seems of no concern to the CFA.
      What Au J had before him was a mere application for leave to start proceedings for judicial review. Au J was in the position of a gate-keeper. Judicial review is brought in the interests of lawful administration, good governance. It is, at the end of the day, a discretionary remedy. 
      The application was made some time after Leung had served his sentence. It might even be the case that his hair had grown back to its full length by that time. Was it made in good faith ? What interests of his did it serve?  Did it help good administration in male prisons to have the hairstyle rule struck down by the court?

A Leadership Role?
Had the CFA been conscious of its leadership role in the community, these would have been matters of concern to the court. But the court gave the procedural aspects of the case not an ounce of thought. It simply played to the agenda laid down by counsel.

Eurocentric View 
And what is perhaps even more troubling is the Eurocentric leaning of the judgments. Instead of giving the words in a local statute their plain ordinary meaning and applying those words to the facts of the case in a robust straightforward way, the courts favoured the formulation of vague principles.
     The judges, at all three levels of the courts, seem drawn to overseas case law as moths to naked light: apparently brushing aside the inconvenient truth that the common law system operates under the principle of One Country Two Systems. Such mindset spells disaster in the long run. This is not a formula for the long continuation of the common law. 
 

Sunday, December 6, 2020

HKU Law Awarded Three KE Impact Project Awards 2019/2020

The University of Hong Kong's Knowledge Exchange (KE) Funding Scheme for Impact Projects supports projects that have the potential to create social, economic, environmental or cultural impacts for industry, business or the community by building on expertise or knowledge in the University and projects designed to collect evidence for corroboration and evaluation of impacts. Engagement projects that aim to benefit non-academic communities beyond Hong Kong are strongly encouraged. 
     The Faculty of Law was successful in obtaining three awards in the 2019/20 round of funding, for most cases in the amount of or less than HK$100,000 except one exceptional outstanding case in the amount of HK$150,000. Congratulations to :
  • Ms Amanda Whitfort "Wildlife Crime: Knowledge Transfer for Informed Sentencing in Greater China". This ongoing and interdisciplinary project involves a collaboration between Associate Professor Amanda Whitfort, Faculty of Law, Dr Caroline Dingle, School of Biological Sciences and Dr Gary Ades, Head of Fauna, Kadoorie Farm and Botanical Garden, in producing a series of wildlife crime impact reports (similar to victim impact statements for endangered species) to aid the Agricultural Fisheries and Conservation Department, Customs and Excise Department and the Department of Justice in effectively prosecuting, and the judiciary in sentencing wildlife crime, under the Wild Animals Protection Ordinance (Cap 170) and the Protection of Endangered Species of Animals and Plants Ordinance (Cap 586). 
  • Dr Richard Wu "Empowering Local School Teachers' Capabilities in Responding to Covid-19-Related Legal Issues Through Experiential Learning". This interdisciplinary project aims to empower local teachers’ capabilities by equipping them with common law concepts and values to respond to COVID-related legal issues in the school setting. Legal knowledge with real life examples will be delivered through experiential learning workshops by academics from HKU Law Faculty, Chinese University of Hong Kong and Education University of Hong Kong, as well as barrister-at-law and legal counsel with knowledge and experience in dealing with COVID-related legal issues. Moreover, this project seeks to create social impact by raising local school teachers’ awareness of legal issues in the school setting that may arise from COVID-19. 
  • Mr Brian Tang "Fostering Law, Innovation, Technology and Entrepreneurship (LITE) through one stop legal online information, tools and resources on LITE Lab @ HKU website". LITE Lab@HKU seeks to be Hong Kong’s first-stop online self-help legal resource for startup companies, social entrepreneurs and non-profit associations who face many legal related issues and challenges setting-up and operationalizing through student-created introductory and user-friendly self-help information, tools and resources. This initiative supports Hong Kong government and HKU’s focus on cultivating and supporting technology, innovation and entrepreneurship. LITE Lab@HKU seeks to build on the great tradition at HKU Faculty of Law’s of assisting Hong Kong citizens through the Community Legal Information Centre (CLIC) website initiatives and its specialized segments for Youth CLIC, Senior CLIC, and Family CLIC.