Adrian Kuenzler
GRUR International
Published online: December 2024
Follow the research activities and scholarship of the Faculty of Law, The University of Hong Kong
"Collaborative Protection of Intellectual Property"
Taorui Guan
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law, Vol. 46 (2024), Issue 2
Published online: January 2025
Abstract: This article examines how Indigenous Peoples who depend on World Heritage sites for their culture and livelihood can appeal to the Committee when State Parties fail to comply with their obligations. While scholars criticize the World Heritage Convention for the lack of participation of Indigenous Peoples, particularly in the inscription and management processes, the framework of the Convention also allows representation and visibility. Indeed, compliance mechanisms offer opportunities for Indigenous advocates to negotiate Land sovereignty and environmental protection. TWAIL, which places the worldview of Indigenous Peoples at the center of legal practice, is crucial to understanding the interactions between Indigenous Peoples and the 1972 UNESCO Convention. TWAILers highlight how international law historically denies sovereignty rights to Indigenous Peoples. Article 6(1) echoes this absence of sovereignty. This article examines three cases in which Indigenous advocates petition to protect Native Lands against environmental degradations and colonization: Kakadu, Wood Buffalo, and Uluru. Ultimately, the challenges of Indigenous activists in their quest to preserve nature and culture reveal that the absence of sovereignty prerogatives remains a substantial issue. While the Convention provides a venue for advocacy and international awareness, Indigenous Peoples still must negotiate Land autonomy and cultural sovereignty with the State.
Congratulations to Michael Ng (吳海傑), whose book Political Censorship in British Hong Kong: Freedom of Expression and the Law (1842–1997) was awarded the honorable mention of the International Society for Chinese Law & History (ISCLH) 2024 Biennial Book Prize. The book was published by the Cambridge University Press in September 2022.
Background on the prize: The International Society for Chinese Law and History (ISCLH) has established a biennial book prize for the monograph that has been published in the previous two years and made a major and unique contribution to improving understanding of Chinese law and history. Eligible monographs shall be based on original research on Chinese law in history, historical works with extensive and substantial legal analysis, or historically grounded legal studies comparing China and another society. For more information on the book prize, click here.
Introduction:
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ARCHBOLD HONG KONG 2025
Editor-in-Chief: The Hon Mr Justice Bokhary
General Editor: Professor Simon Young
Sweet & Maxwell
October 2024
"Auction Houses in Britain and China: The History and the Law"
David Kwok
Art Antiquity and Law (2024, Vol 29, Issue 3, pp.238)
Published online: October 2024
法社會學信札(Letters on Sociology of Law)
簡介(Description): 本書採用類似於《波斯人信札》的書信文體,通過一位法科學生與一位社會學教授的書信對話,深入淺出地闡釋法律社會學的發展歷史和經典理論、法律社會學的研究方法、論述法律系統的社會結構與變遷以及一些經典實證研究等,並應用這些理論與方法對中國法律實踐的種種現實問題進行探討,在看似大相徑庭的學術知識之間建立起關聯。
本書不同於一般的學術專著和傳統教材,更像是一個學習法律社會學的路線圖。文后還按信件順序給出了參考文獻,讀者可以按圖索驥汲取更多營養,不必拘泥於某種對理論或者學術傳統的通常解釋。
除了介紹和解讀法社會學,還有一個面向,就是書信體帶來的“符號互動主義”的展現。通過兩個人的對話,使理論的源流、意涵和指向更清晰,同時也展示了年輕學者的一些學術人生中的困惑、掙扎與努力。而且通信的過程,就是不斷建構兩個人之間的關係,這種人與人之間的關係是一直動態變化着的。