Follow the research activities and scholarship of the Faculty of Law, The University of Hong Kong
Wednesday, December 17, 2025
HKU–ALSA Young Scholars Conference Successfully Held at the University of Hong Kong
Friday, February 21, 2025
Hualing Fu on Managed freedom in precarious times: Maintaining academic freedom in transitional Hong Kong (GlobCon)
Hualing Fu
Global Constitutionalism
Published online: January 2025
Monday, July 29, 2024
Book review of Diamant Neil's Useful Bullshit: Constitutions in Chinese Politics and Society by Hualing Fu
"DIAMANT, Neil J. 2022. Useful Bullshit: Constitutions in Chinese Politics and Society. Ithaca: Cornell University Press."
Hualing Fu
China Perspective (Issue 137, 2024)
Tuesday, November 7, 2023
Hualing Fu interviewed on Innovating Legal Education at HKU (Hong Kong Lawyer)
"Innovating Legal Education at HKU"
Doris Yu
Hong Kong Lawyer
October 2023
Tuesday, October 24, 2023
Hualing Fu on High Policing and Human Rights Lawyering in China (CUP book chapter)
"High Policing and Human Rights Lawyering in China"
Hualing Fu
in Weitseng Chen (ed) and Hualing Fu (ed), Regime Type and Beyond: The Transformation of Police in Asia, (Cambridge University Press, May 2023), pp. 53-86
Hualing Fu and Weitseng Chen on Mapping the Authoritarian and Democratic Divide: The Transformation of Policing in Asia (CUP book chapter)
"Mapping the Authoritarian and Democratic Divide The Transformation of Policing in Asia"
Hualing Fu and Weitseng Chen
in Weitseng Chen (ed) and Hualing Fu (ed), Regime Type and Beyond: The Transformation of Police in Asia, (Cambridge University Press, May 2023), pp. 3-25
New Book Edited by Hualing Fu and Weitseng Chen: Regime Type and Beyond: The Transformation of Police in Asia (Cambridge University Press)
Edited by Weitseng Chen, Hualing Fu
Cambridge University Press
Published in May 2023
400 pp.
‘A comprehensive, in-depth and insightful study of policing and its political context in East and Southeast Asia, including the relationship between authoritarian and democratic policing and democratization.’
Albert Chen - Cheng Chan Lan Yue Professor and Chair of Constitutional Law, The University of Hong Kong
‘The case studies of diverse East Asian societies make clear that an independent legal system and police professionalism can do much to protect citizen rights and wellbeing, even with dictatorial leaders and colonial and authoritarian pasts. This volume is essential reading for those committed to democracy and decency in government. The realism and knowledge the book provides with its’ attention to paradoxes and ambivalences in a rich, nuanced, interdisciplinary tapestry significantly expands understanding. It sets a high standard for comparative international studies of policing and democracy and will become a classic.’
Gary T. Marx - Professor Emeritus, MIT
‘In exploring the complex commonalities and divergences of policing in Asia, Chen and Fu have produced the very best kind of edited volume. It brings together a range of great scholars on a novel question, and collectively moves our knowledge forward. Highly recommended!’
Tom Ginsburg - Leo Spitz Distinguished Service Professor of International Law, Ludwig and Hilde Wolf Research Scholar, Professor of Political Science, The University of Chicago
Wednesday, March 1, 2023
Hualing Fu & Xiaobo Zhai on The Return of High Policing in Hong Kong (new book chapter)
Hualing Fu & Xiaobo Zhai
in The National Security Law of Hong Kong: Restoration and Transformation,
Chapter 9, pp. 187-210
Introduction: "What a disgrace!" lamented Xia Baolong, Director of the Office for Hong Kong and Macau Affairs, the highest-ranking official in the Central People's Government (CPG) in charge of Hong Kong affairs in a particularly condescending outburst to condemn the 2019 protests in Hong Kong. That's how Beijing, Hong Kong's sovereign, perceived what happened in Hong Kong in 2019. For the CPG, what was presented as democratic protest by the international media was nothing short of systematic disorder and organized violence bordering on insurrection. What was shocking and extremely displeasing for the CPG was not only the level of violence and vandalism that some Hong Kong people proved to be capable of, but also the degree of sympathy and support they received from the larger communities in Hong Kong and internationally, and the incompetence and indifference of the Hong Kong government. In the CPG's eyes, Hong Kong has turned from an economic asset into a political liability. More importantly, the CPG believed that the unrest in Hong Kong exposed China to hostile international forces and put China's national security at grave risk.
This chapter offers a preliminary study of the role and functions of the high policing, also called political or national security policing, which the NSL has introduced in Hong Kong and its initial and long-term impact on the rule of law and rights and freedoms in Hong Kong. The role that the political policing plays in Hong Kong largely depends upon the ultimate political end of the NSL. Beyond the immediate goal of ending violence, nipping the pro-independence movement in the bud, and stopping foreign political meddling in Hong Kong, to what degree does the CPG intend to reorient Hong Kong and to bring it into the Chinese orbit? Clearly, China continues to insist on the One Country Two Systems doctrine (OCTS), although to be enforced in a "correct way" that privileges its one country element. China, however, does not intend to turn it into just another Chinese city. In one of his speeches in 2017, President Xi Jinping highlighted Hong Kong's "distinctive strengths", including its pluralist and cosmopolitan society and its status as a major international financial centre. China clearly stopped far short from imposing its own National Security Law (2015) upon Hong Kong, nor did it transplant its own national security practice in its entirety to Hong Kong. In enacting the NSL, China sent a clear signal that, while the excess in 2019 should not happen again, Hong Kong will remain a distinct Special Administrative Region (SAR) in the foreseeable future. There is a long spectrum between the unrest in 2019 and the Chinese regime of national security: where would Hong Kong find itself in the post-NSL era?
This chapter explores three connected issues: 1) the political circumstances for the creation of the national security policing in Hong Kong; 2) the major features of the high policing that the NSL has created in Hong Kong, which are demonstrated by means of an analysis of the NSL, and the immediate impact that the NSL may have on the rule of law and rights and freedoms in Hong Kong; and 3) a possible new equilibrium between the national security policing and Hong Kong's liberal rule of law under the OCTS doctrine.
Thursday, February 23, 2023
Hualing Fu & Michael Hor on Introduction: Re-balancing Freedom and Security in Post-NSL Hong Kong (new book chapter)
Hualing Fu & Michael Hor
in The National Security Law of Hong Kong: Restoration and Transformation,
Chapter 1, pp. 1-19
Introduction: This book offers a dialogic study of the Law of the People's Republic of China on Safeguarding National Security Law (NSL) in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR). It examines the text and the context of the NSL, what caused it and what it has caused, and highlights the changes - real, potential or merely imagined - that the NSL has brought and is likely to bring to Hong Kong. Constitutional development is not brought about by isolated events but by a series of connected episodes that have taken place over a long duration with each act done in response to an earlier one and, in turn, generating future dialectical reactions in multiple fields, some contemplated and others unforeseen, or perhaps, still unforeseeable. It is a complicated process and emotions may run high, but there is always a logic to be discovered and explained to make sense of what, at first sight, appear to be chaotic, random occurrences. This book studies the political and constitutional roots of the NSL as well as its practical operation in Hong Kong. The book also attempts to view the NSL in the larger Chinese, and comparative law, perspectives.
This introductory chapter first situates the enactment of the NSL in the context of Hong Kong's own constitutional context and in particular, the failed attempt to enact Hong Kong national security law in 2003 as required by the Basic Law (BL), and the tortuous path of democratic pursuit that Hong Kong had trodden. The chapter then explores the constitutional and political roots of the NSL in the Chinese constitutional order. Part Three addresses several key issues on the impact of the NSL on the legal system, academic freedom, business, and media among others. Finally, part four assesses the future prospects of Hong Kong's one country two systems doctrine (OCTS) and Hong Kong's freedoms under rule of law in the post NSL era, assessed from a comparative perspective by referencing the development in national security law in mainland China, Singapore and liberal democracies.
Friday, February 17, 2023
New Book edited by Hualing Fu & Michael Hor: The National Security Law of Hong Kong: Restoration and Transformation (HKU Press)
(香港國安法:社會重建與變革)
Edited by Hualing Fu & Michael Hor
Hong Kong University Press
Published in July 2022
396 pp.
Review:
“This collection addresses an important and timely issue, and provides an invaluable resource for all lawyers interested in Hong Kong as they grapple with the momentous changes in its legal landscape. The collection will surely serve as a reference point for further discussion and debate.”
—Victor V. Ramraj, University of Victoria, Canada
“This book covers the most important aspects of national security issues, including freedom and security that we have always been concerned about. This timely publication not only offers the latest research results for the academic community, but also provides important reference materials for the Hong Kong society to understand the important topics of national security.”
—Zhu Guobin, City University of Hong Kong
Friday, February 3, 2023
Hualing Fu on Pandemic Control in China’s Gated Communities (new book chapter)
Hualing Fu
Wednesday, September 28, 2022
Hualing Fu on Pandemic Control in China’s Gated Communities (SSRN)
Fu Hualing
SSRN
Published in July 2022
Friday, April 22, 2022
Ying Sun & Hualing Fu on Judge Quota and Judicial Autonomy: An Enduring Professionalization Project in China (The China Quarterly)
Ying Sun & Hualing Fu
Monday, March 14, 2022
Hualing Fu & Xianchu Zhang on Judging the Party: Public Law Wrongs and Private Law Remedies (Chinese J of Comp Law)
Hualing Fu & Xianchu Zhang
The Chinese Journal of Comparative Law
Published on 23 February 2022
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
HKU Law Dean's Address to the Graduating Class of 2021
Friday, October 15, 2021
HKU Law Dean’s Letter to the Incoming Class of 2021
Sunday, July 25, 2021
New Book: Hong Kong in China—Rethinking the Hong Kong–Mainland Relationship (in Chinese) (香港在中國—重新思考內地與香港關係) by Christine Loh and Richard Cullen
<<香港在中國—重新思考內地與香港關係>>
Author / Editor
著 陸恭蕙 (Ms Christine Loh) 高禮文 (Professor Richard Cullen) , 譯 魏磊傑
City University of Hong Kong Press
Published in August 2021
Preface by Professor Albert Chen.
Introduction of Preface: A "Post-National
Security Law Era" Narrative
for Hong Kong
What is "one country, two systems"?
How should we understand the relationship between the "high degree of
autonomy" of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), state
sovereignty and the central authorities’ “comprehensive jurisdiction” over the
HKSAR? What should be the identity of Hong Kong people? What kind of discourse
or narrative should there be about the "Hong Kong
Story"? How should Hong Kong’s past be understood? What kind of
future will Hong Kong have? How could the path of "one country,
two systems" proceed?
In the "post-National
Security Law era", this series of issues is more urgent than at any other
time in history, and they are causing anxiety among many Hong Kong people.
Although this book was written before the enactment of the HKSAR National
Security Law, it has fleshed out these issues and provided preliminary answers
to them.
In fact, I believe that in the "post-National Security Law era", this book is more meaningful, valuable and enlightening to us than it was at the time of its writing. The authors are Christine Loh and Richard Cullen. Loh is a public figure in Hong Kong, having served as a member of the Hong Kong Legislative Council before and after reunification, and as Undersecretary for the Environment of the HKSAR Government. Loh is also a scholar and has written many books. Cullen, from Australia, has taught at the School of Law of City University of Hong Kong for many years, and in recent years at the Faculty of Law of The University of Hong Kong. Both authors are intellectuals who have long lived in Hong Kong, served Hong Kong and love Hong Kong. This book is the culmination of years of their reflections on Hong Kong's situation under "one country, two systems", and on the "Hong Kong story".
Praise from the Dean Professor Fu Hualing (in Chinese):
「這本書提醒讀者香港憲制的歷史是世界歷史和中國歷史的一個小插曲。近二十年來有關一國兩制的爭論和衝突只有放在中國和世界的視野下才會有真正的意義—它們主要是世界格局的變化在香港引發的陣痛。應對速變是香港的宿命,而香港從來都能把握好危機中的機會。本書正是告訴讀者香港的將來在中國、中國的將來在世界。把握好這個機遇,香港依然是中國走向世界的橋樑。」
傅華伶
香港大學 法律學院教授,院長
Friday, July 9, 2021
Fu Hualing & Michael Jackson on Protest, Law and Regime Type (new book chapter)
Fu Hualing & Michael Jackson
in Democracy and Rule of Law in China's Shadow, edited by Brian Christopher Jones, (Hart Publishing, July 2021), Chapter One
Saturday, March 13, 2021
New Book by Jason Buhi (PhD 2014): Global Constitutional Narratives of Autonomous Regions: The Constitutional History of Macau (Routledge)
Jason Buhi (PhD 2014)
Routledge
Thursday, October 29, 2020
New Issue of Hong Kong Law Journal (Vol. 50 - Celebrating 50 Years of Legal Scholarship, Part 2 of 2020)
Johannes Chan ... 657
Ding Chunyan ... 781
















