Friday, August 27, 2021

New Book: The Values of International Organizations by James Fry et al (Manchester University Press)

- Melland Schill Studies in International Law
James Fry,  Bryane Michael, and Natasha Pushkarna
Manchester University Press
Published on 10 August 2021
280 pp.
Synopsis: From the United Nations to the International Bureau of Weights and Measures, the principles of international organizations affect all of our lives. The principles these organizations live by represent, at least in part, the principles all of us live by. This book quantifies international organizations' affiliation with particular principles in their constitutions, like cooperation, peace and equality.
     Offering a sophisticated statistical and legal analysis of these principles, the authors reveal the values contained in international organizations' constitutions and their relationship with one another. When these organizations are divided into groups, like regional versus universal organizations, many new, seemingly contradictory, interpretations of international organizations law emerge. Through elaborate network representations, radar charters, k-clusters analyses and scatter plots, this book offers an unprecedented insight into the principles and values of international organizations.

Wednesday, August 18, 2021

Amanda Whitfort's KE work achieves OSCO amendment

Today the Organised and Serious Crimes Ordinance Cap 455 was amended to define smuggling of wildlife as organised and serious crime. This amendment will allow authorities to enforce the criminal law more effectively against the syndicates and kingpins behind the international trade in endangered species. Over the past 2 years over 900 tonnes of of wildlife was seized in Hong Kong. These seizures continue a decade-long upward trend that has seen the decimation of rhino, elephant and pangolin populations, globally, while the criminals funding the slaughter grow rich. The enhanced investigative and punitive powers that will now be accessible to law enforcement authorities tasked with combatting wildlife crime are a potential game changer, not just for Hong Kong, but regionally. If applied proactively, the OSCO amendment will result in critical deterrence of criminals seeking to exploit Hong Kong's porous borders to smuggle endangered species.
      Associate Professor Amanda Whitfort has worked for over 7 years to bring about this amendment. She has assisted the Wildlife Trade Working Group (a group of academics and NGOS convened by ADM Capital Foundation)in their advocacy, provided research on illegal trade to government and authored the White Paper on Enhanced Enforcement Strategies to protect Endangered Species that led Elizabeth Quat to propose the OSCO amendment as a private members bill in 2020.
      The HKU Law Faculty is also host to Whitfort's species victim impact statement initiative https://www.svis.law.hku.hk/ which aims to ensure prosecutors and judges understand the serious effects of wildlife crime on biodiversity and ecosystems globally. This project has resulted in a 2000% increase in sentences for wildlife crime since its inception in 2017.

Friday, August 6, 2021

CMEL Newsletter (July 2021)

The Centre for Medical Ethics and Law (CMEL) develops new ideas and solutions in response to the big ethical, legal and policy questions of medicine and health.

CMEL is the first cross-faculty interdisciplinary institution of its kind in the region. It was founded in 2012 by the LKS Faculty of Medicine and Faculty of Law at The University of Hong Kong as a joint inheritor of their vibrant intellectual traditions dating back to 1887 and 1969 respectively.

Today, CMEL brings together bioethicists, academic lawyers, medical scientists, and other scholars to conduct cutting edge bioethical and legal research and contribute to policy development in flagship areas like population and global health, mental health and capacity, and digital health and emergent technologies.

Research, teaching and knowledge exchange—CMEL’s core initiatives—aim to ensure that developments in biomedicine and public health will be underpinned by ethical and legal considerations.

To view the latest newsletter, click: CMEL July Newsletter

EDITORIAL

GRF GRANT TO STUDY BEST INTERESTS


CMEL Deputy Director Daisy Cheung was recently awarded a research grant to study best interests determinations on behalf of persons deemed to be lacking mental capacity, a critical but largely neglected topic which falls under CMEL's flagship research area of "Mental Health and Capacity". The grant, awarded by the Research Grants Council General Research Fund, is entitled "Deciding what is best for you: Best interest determinations on behalf of persons without capacity in the Chinese context" and will support a three year project which will examine the use of the concept of "best interests" in decision-making on behalf of persons without mental capacity in the jurisdictions of Hong Kong, China and Taiwan. In addition, the project will also consider (i) the ethical underpinnings of the concept of "best interests" in the Chinese context, including the extent to which Confucian ethics and values have influenced the development of the concept and its utilisation in these jurisdictions; and (ii) the extent to which the concept of "best interests" is consistent with local and international human rights standards, including those of the CRPD. Daisy is also currently working on an edited monograph, which will be co-edited with Dr Michael Dunn from the Ethox Centre at the University of Oxford. This volume will examine the law and practice of advance medical directives in 17 jurisdictions across Asia, and is scheduled to be published with Cambridge University Press in 2022.

In this month's newsletter, we are pleased to present new publications and a media interview. On the theme of Mental Health and Capacity, readers may wish to note Daisy's open-access journal article on Adult Guardianship.

Readers are also welcome to participate in a webinar scheduled to be held by the Hong Kong Academy of Law on 19 August. CMEL Advisory Board Member Terry Kaan and Co-Director Calvin W. L. Ho will speak on the Future of Law in Medicine and Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare. This webinar is open to members of the Law Society of Hong Kong only.

LATEST CMEL RESEARCH

JOURNAL ARTICLES


"Bringing the Adult Guardianship Regime in Line with the UNCRPD: The Chinese Experience" [Open Access]

By Daisy Cheung (CMEL Deputy Director)

In International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family (2021)
https://doi.org/10.1093/lawfam/ebab016

《使成人監護制度與聯合國〈殘疾人權利公約〉標準一致:香港與中國大陸的經驗》[免費閱覽]

作者: 張天目助理教授 (本中心副總監)

刊登於《國際法律、政策及家庭期刊》(2021)
https://doi.org/10.1093/lawfam/ebab016

"Genetic Discrimination: Introducing the Asian Perspective to the Debate" [Open Access]

By Hannah Kim, Calvin W. L. Ho (CMEL Co-Director), Chih-Hsing Ho (CMEL Research Fellow), P. S. Athira, Kazuto Kato, Leonardo De Castro, Hui Kang, Richard Huxtable, Hub Zwart, Jonathan Ives, Ilhak Lee, Yann Joly & So Yoon Kim

In npj Genomic Medicine (2021)
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41525-021-00218-4

《基因歧視:亞洲視角》[免費閱覽]

作者: Hannah Kim, 何維倫副教授(本中心總監), 何之行博士(本中心研究學者), P. S. Athira, Kazuto Kato, Leonardo De Castro, Hui Kang, Richard Huxtable, Hub Zwart, Jonathan Ives, Ilhak Lee, Yann Joly & So Yoon Kim

刊登於《npj基因組醫學》(2021)
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41525-021-00218-4

POLICY PAPER

"Ethical Framework for WHO's work in the ACT-Accelerator" [Open Access]

The ACT-Accelerator is a collaboration to accelerate development, production, and equitable access to COVID-19 tests, treatments, and vaccines.

CMEL Co-Director Calvin W. L. Ho contributed to the drafting of this policy paper.

https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/WHO-2019-nCoV-ACT-Accelerator-Ethical_framework-2021.1?fbclid=IwAR0eG4sUapvh4Jy9_nT6vSyGecjxtcRTFcGbyA_yx9xMWoNfc_YIigerhAw

《世界衞生組織2019冠状病毒病應對工具加速器的倫理框架》[免費閱覽]

2019冠狀病毒病應對工具加速器 (ACT-Accelerator)是一個合作項目,旨在加速2019冠狀病毒病測試、治療及疫苗的發展、生產及公平獲得。

本中心總監何維倫副教授參與了草擬此政策文件的工作。

https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/WHO-2019-nCoV-ACT-Accelerator-Ethical_framework-2021.1?fbclid=IwAR0eG4sUapvh4Jy9_nT6vSyGecjxtcRTFcGbyA_yx9xMWoNfc_YIigerhAw

KNOWLEDGE EXCHANGE

VACCINATION TARGETS AND THE RETURN TO PRE-PANDEMIC LIFE


In an interview with the South China Morning Post, CMEL Co-Director Calvin W. L. Ho shared his views on setting targets of vaccination rates in the hope of returning to pre-pandemic life in Hong Kong.

Click here for the article.

在《南華早報》的訪問中,本中心總監何維倫副教授分享了他對設立疫苗接種率目標以期讓香港回復疫情前的生活狀態的看法。

按此閱讀報道。

UPCOMING WEBINAR

Webinar: "The Impact of Innovative Technologies and Contemporary Practices in Healthcare on Medical Law; Shared Decision-making and Mediation"

Organiser: Hong Kong Academy of Law
Date: 19 August 2021 (Thu)
Time: 5pm - 7pm (Hong Kong Time)

Speakers:
Mr Terry Kaan (CMEL Advisory Board Member)
Dr Calvin W. L. Ho (CMEL Co-Director)
Dr James Chiu

CPD Accreditation by the Law Society of Hong Kong: 2 point(s)

Registration: Click here (Webinar open to members of the Law Society only)

[網上研討會]「創新科技與當代醫療慣常做法對醫療法的影響; 共享決策和調解」

主辦: 香港法律專業學會
日期: 2021年8月19日(四)
時間: 下午5時至7時 (香港時間)

講者:
簡尚恆副教授 (本中心諮詢委員會成員)
何維倫副教授(本中心總監)
趙承平醫生

香港律師會持續專業進修學分: 2

報名: 按此 (只限香港律師會會員)

UPCOMING CONFERENCE/ SYMPOSIUM

Virtual Event: 11th National Paediatric Research Conference/ 2nd Paediatric Bioethics Symposium

Organiser: International Medical University, Malaysia

Date: 17-21 November 2021

CMEL Co-Director, Dr Calvin W. L. Ho, will be one of the speakers. He will speak on the topic "involving families and children in online research".

Registration & Details: Click here

[網上活動]「第十一屆國家兒科研究大會/第二屆兒科生物倫理學研討會」

主辦: 馬來西亞國際醫科大學

日期: 2021年11月17至21日

本中心總監何維倫副教授為講者之一,他的講題是《讓家庭和兒童參與線上研究》。

報名及詳情: 按此

EDITORIAL ON MEDICAL MANSLAUGHTER

One of the presenters of CMEL’s April 2021 Gross Negligence Manslaughter webinar has recently published the following editorial on the subject:

"Medical Manslaughter: The Role of Hindsight" [Open Access]

By Prof Gilberto K. K. LEUNG

In Hong Kong Medical Journal (2021)
https://doi.org/10.12809/hkmj215117

本中心曾於2021 年 4 月舉辦關於嚴重疏忽誤殺的網上研討會,其中一名講者最近發表了相關社論文章如下:

《醫療誤殺: 後見之明的角色》[免費閱覽]

作者:梁嘉傑教授

刊登於《香港醫學雜誌》 (2021)
https://doi.org/10.12809/hkmj215117

Thursday, August 5, 2021

Elaine Yim (MPhil 2021) on A Buck-Passing Account of ‘Moral Equality’ (Res Publica)

"A Buck-Passing Account of ‘Moral Equality’"
Elaine Yim (MPhil 2021) 
Res Publica , Volume 27, pp. 25–40
Published in 2021
Abstract: The belief that all human beings are ‘moral equals’ is widespread within the canon of Western liberal philosophy. However, it is unclear precisely what ‘moral equality’ or its associate terms mean, what grounds our ‘moral equality’ and what the implications of being ‘moral equals’ are. In this paper, I distinguish between three ways of understanding ‘moral equality’: the ‘buck-passing’, ‘explanatory’ and ‘reverse-explanatory’ accounts. The buck-passing account of moral equality is in parallel with Scanlon’s buck-passing account of value. It holds that ‘moral equality’ is not a metaphysically fundamental concept and simply amounts to having other properties shared equally by all human beings that constitute the reasons for why we ought to treat all human beings equally in certain respects. The explanatory account understands the concept of ‘moral equality’ as metaphysically fundamental and explanatory of why human beings who are the same in certain respects have the same entitlement to x. The reverse-explanatory account also sees ‘moral equality’ as metaphysically fundamental but holds that the explanatory relationship goes the other way round: moral equality is explained by how we ought to act. I argue that the buck-passing account is a more accurate way of understanding moral equality.

Elaine Yim (MPhil 2021) on "Why Compatriot Partiality Arguments Cannot Support Extensive Immigration Control" (Journal of Social Philosophy)

"Why Compatriot Partiality Arguments Cannot Support Extensive Immigration Control"
Elaine Yim (MPhil 2021)
Journal of Social Philosophy
Published on 13 July 2020
Introduction: Immigration restrictions are common and extensive: almost all states enact their own immigration policies to decide who to admit. Unless constrained by international covenants or transnational agreements, immigration policies are typically based on what state legislators or their delegates perceive to be in the interests of the state and its citizens, with little regard to that of potential immigrants. However, immigration restrictions limit freedoms that protect important interests, including freedom of movement, freedom of association, freedom of occupational choice, and so on. They prevent people from choosing their preferred place of residence, taking up jobs of their own preference, and so on. If restrictions to freedoms that protect important interests require sufficient justification, then the current practices of immigration control ought to be sufficiently justified.

Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Syren Johnstone on Crypto-assets and Disintermediation in Finance: A View from Asia (new book chapter)

“Crypto-assets and disintermediation in finance: A view from Asia”
Syren Johnstone
in E. Kaili and D. Psarrakis (eds.) Disintermediation Economics:The Impact of Blockchain on Markets and Policies (Palgrave Macmillan, 2021), Chapter 10, pp. 215-245
Abstract: The response in Asia to the emergence of crypto-assets has varied enormously intra-regionally due to variances not only in legal systems and regulatory preoccupations but also in cultural values, political ideologies, economic and social development, and the maturation of financial systems. After a review of the Asian narrative in Section 1, the current status of regulation in Asia is summarized in Section 2. Sections 3 and 4 address the hurdles to ecosystem development and questions whether regulatory incrementalism is sustainable. The final Section 5 provides suggestions for policy development.

Tuesday, August 3, 2021

Zhang Xianchu on Bankruptcy Law in China (new book chapter)

"Bankruptcy Law in China"
Zhang Xianchu
in Company Law in Hong Kong: Insolvency 2021 ed. by Stefan Lo (Bloomsbury, December 2020), Chapter 14
Description: 
Company Law in Hong Kong: Insolvency by Stefan Lo.
Annual update to the application of particular areas under the Companies Ordinance (Cap.622) and Companies (Winding-Up and Miscellaneous Provisions) Ordinance (Cap.32)
New General Editor – Stefan HC Lo, member of the Company Law Re-write Team
2021 edition examines important changes under the following chapters:

Chapter 1 – Directors
Chapter 2 – Role and Status of Liquidators
Chapter 3 – Provisional Liquidation
Chapter 4 – Winding Up by the Court
Chapter 5 – Members’ Voluntary Winding Up
Chapter 6 – Investigations, Assets, Claims, and Realizations
Chapter 7 – Creditors in Winding Up
Chapter 8 – Schemes of Arrangement
Chapter 9 – Setting Aside of preferences and Trading Issues
Chapter 10 – Liquidation Costs
Chapter 11 – Receivership
Chapter 12 – Cross Border Issues
Chapter 13 – Corporate Rescue
Chapter 14 – Bankruptcy Law in China


Introduction of Chapter 14 - Bankruptcy Law in China:
Unlike Hong Kong, Mainland China as a socialist country practiced the so-called planned economy for three decades in which all economic activities of the country were controlled by the government with state-owned enterprises (SOEs) as the dominant business entities. Such condition was not changed until the historical economic reform and the open-door policy were implemented in 1978. Since 1978 China has been transformed into a "socialist market economy” with the 1993 Constitutional Amendment to codify the reorientation and accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001 as two primary milestones. For 40 years, China has been a hot place to attract foreign investments and in 2012 China surpassed Japan to become the second largest economy in the world. Although the Communist Party and the political ideology still play a crucial role and cause uncertainties, the market force is increasingly taking the course of the national development. After the new leadership took their office in 2012, an explicit pledge was made in the Decision of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) on Certain Major Issues Concerning Comprehensively Deepening Reforms to let the market to play a decisive role in resource allocation, including further improvement of enterprise bankruptcy regime. 

In the course of dynamic market growth, the legal infrastructure has also developed rapidly. Although the short period of development has not allowed its legal framework to reach a very comprehensive and sophisticated stage, to a large extent China has made significant progress in modernising its entire legal system. In October 2011, the Chinese Government declared that a new socialist legal system with Chinese characteristics had been established, which then included the Constitution, 240 laws, 706 administrative regulations and 8,600 local provisions at that time. 

Against this background it may be useful to briefly highlight the legal sources and their main feature before embark to examine bankruptcy laws and regulations in detail. Legislative activities in China are governed by the People’s Republic of China Constitution (PRC Constitution), as amended in 2004 and the People’s Republic of China Legislation Law of 2000 (PRC Legislation Law), as amended in 2015, which classifies the legal resources into four categories with the Constitution as the supreme law of the country.  Under the Constitution, the National People’s Congress (NPC) acts as the primary legislative organ of the country. It has the power to enact and amend basic laws (基本法律) such as the Criminal Law and the General Principles of Civil Law as well as the Hong Kong Basic Law.  Its Standing Committee as the executive organ of the NPC also possesses law-making powers to pass and amend laws, provided that those matters are not reserved to the NPC.  When the NPC is not in session, the Standing Committee also has power to pass supplements and amendments to laws enacted by the NPC provided that such legislation is consistent with the basic principles of the relevant laws.

The Constitution and the Legislation Law also empower the State Council as the central government to enact administrative regulations (行政法規) in accordance with the Constitution and the national laws.  Where the NPC or its Standing Committee has not enacted any laws, the State Council may be delegated the power to enact administrative regulations on such matters first.  In practice, administrative regulations may be issued in different forms, such as measures, notices and provisions. Given the nature of the so-called socialist market economy, the central government may also from time to time issue its policies, which may have significant impacts in the market.

Below the central legislative bodies noted above, the Constitution also empowers the people’s congresses and governments of the provinces, major cities and the special economic zones to enact local regulations (地方性法規), provided that such regulations do not contravene the Constitution and the national laws and administrative regulations promulgated by the NPC, its Standing Committee and the State Council.  The Constitution also delegates to the people’s congresses of national autonomous regions the power to enact autonomy regulations (自治條例) and specific provisions (單行條例).  Moreover, all the ministries, state commissions, the People’s Bank and other state administrations directly under the State Council may also have powers to promulgate administrative provisions for matters within their own jurisdiction. 

In order to prevent, and deal with, conflict of legal rules adopted by different central and local authorities, the Legislation Law sets out some governing principles and procedures. For example, all the enactments should be filed with the Standing Committee of the NPC for record  rules with a higher legal status shall prevail over lower level rules in cases of conflict; and the Standing Committee of the NPC and the State Council may have the authority to make ruling on legal conflicts concerned  and even annual the lower level provisions. 

Unlike common law systems, the judiciary in China does not have power to interpret the law except the Supreme People’s Court (SPC). As such, the SPC has developed a practice to issue judicial circulars as binding legal authority to guide case handlings of the lower courts. The SPC promulgated the Provisions Concerning Judicial Interpretations (司法解釋) on 23 March 2007 (2007 SPC Provisions). Article 5 of these 2007 SPC Provisions Concerning Judicial Interpretations explicitly stipulates that judicial interpretations adopted by the SPC shall have the effect of the law, which may be in forms of interpretations, provisions, replies and decisions of the SPC. In addition, the SPC in recent years has promoted guiding cases practice as part of its efforts to streamline the local practice and deal to with issues and concerns newly raised. According to the Provisions Concerning Case Guidance (案例指導) of the SPC dated 26 November 2010 (2010 SPC Provisions), the local People’s Courts are required to make reference to the guiding cases selected by the SPC from the judicial decisions when dealing with the similar cases. By July 2018, the SPC had issued 96 guiding cases (指導性案例) in 18 batches. Although thus far no guiding case on bankruptcy as such has been issued, some may have implications on liquidation and bankruptcy practice. For instance, in the Guiding Case No 9 where shareholders failed to carry out liquidation in a timely manner after the company’s business license was revoked by the state administration, the First Intermediate People’s Court of Shanghai by affirming the lower court decision held the two individual shareholders liable jointly with the company for the unpaid debts due to loss of the account books and assets of the company, although they argued that they were not in a position to control the company affairs. The court pointed out that regardless of the percentage of their equity holdings and involvement in the company’s affairs, it is shareholders’ legal duty to liquidate their company within the statutory period after the business license of their company was revoked.  The SPC also published the 10 illustrative cases of enterprise bankruptcy and liquidation in 2016 and 2018, respectively, as a new practice to promote judicial practice in this area. Some local People’s Court has begun to follow this practice by publishing leading bankruptcy and reorganisation cases of their own jurisdictions.

Besides various enactments as legal resources, the judicial policy has also played an important role in legal practice. For instance, during the worldwide financial crisis, the SPC promulgated a series of policies in order to stabilise the economic conditions of the country and avoid massive bankruptcy of enterprises, such as the SPC’s Opinions on Certain Issues Concerning Correctly Handling Enterprises Bankruptcy Cases to Provide Market Economic Order with Judicial Protection on 12 June 2009 (2009 Opinions). According to the 2009 Opinions, the People’s Courts should actively coordinate with the government and the Communist Party to deal with various problems in the crisis period for maintaining social stability and to sensibly apply the bankruptcy rules. Even some enterprises were already insolvent and apparently lack of capacity of repaying their debts, the People’s Courts were required to take active rescue measures to avoid bankruptcy as long as these firms were in line with the national industrial policy with prospects. 

The latest policy in this regard was promulgated in the Principal Notes of the National Judicial Conference on Bankruptcy Trials of the SPC on 4 March 2018 (Principal Notes of 2018), which set out the direction for professional development, improvement of the administrator system, streamlining bankruptcy and reorganisation practice, enhancement of judicial enforcement and transparency and better cross-border insolvency handling. 

Monday, August 2, 2021

Eric Ip on The Political Determinants of China’s New Health Constitution (Medical Law Review)

"The Political Determinants of China’s New Health Constitution"
Eric Ip
Medical Law Review
Published on 13 March 2021
Abstract: The Basic Healthcare and Health Promotion Law 2019 became the new constitution of China’s health system in June 2020, giving legal effect to ambitious health reform programmes like Healthy China 2030. The concurrent outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 must not distract us from appreciating the fact that this Law will comprehensively overhaul the health regulatory framework of the world’s most populous country during the coming decade, if not beyond. This article offers an original evaluation of the Law in its political context. The Law commendably promises to safeguard the right to health, assist citizens to live a ‘complete cycle of life’, and promote health using the resources of the public health system. However, it is also deeply politicised, guaranteeing extensive and penetrative political control in health campaigns, digitalised health data, the governance of health institutions, and the resolution of medical disputes. This can be explained by the consequential roles played by epidemics in China’s historical dynastic cycles, but even more so by powerful tendencies of centralisation on the part of the Leninist Party-state. The Law’s potential is thus subject to the overriding caveat that the Party-state’s existence and influence over law and public health must be secured.

Sunday, August 1, 2021

HKU Law Welcomes AIIFL Postdoctoral Fellow Dr Kuzi Charamba

Dr Kuzi Charamba joined as Post-Doctoral Fellow in FinTech, RegTech, Sustainability, and Sustainable Development, based in the Asian Institute of International Financial Law (AIIFL) in February 2021. Kuzi did his PhD / DCL and LLM at McGill University, Montreal, Canada and his LLB at Kings College London. He has taught a number of courses at McGill during his PhD / DCL studies, including winning McGill’s Teaching Tomorrow’s Professor Award. 

 He also has extensive research experience, in particular with the One Earth Future Foundation in Denver, Colorado, USA, as a Visiting Scholar in Residence at the University of Colorado Law School, and research assistant to several leading professors at McGill. He has delivered papers and presentations in Thailand, Canada, the USA, the Dominican Republic, Spain and the Netherlands.

His first book Hired Guns and Human Rights had been published.