Gary Meggitt
in Commercial Insurance Law: Emerging Trends and New Perspectives, edited by Barış Soyer (Routledge, February 2026), Chapter 11, pp.209-234
Published online: February 2026
Follow the research activities and scholarship of the Faculty of Law, The University of Hong Kong
Description
Does the upsurge in populism, authoritarianism, and nationalism threaten the future of the rule of law? In this highly topical book, Raymond Wacks explores the philosophical roots of the concept, and its modern, often controversial, interpretation.
He explores numerous ideological, economic, legal, and institutional attacks on the rule of law. They range from the exercise of judicial and administrative discretion, and parliamentary sovereignty to the growth of globalisation, the 'war on terror', and the increasing power of Big Tech and especially artificial intelligence. The author identifies which threats pose genuine risks to the rule of law, and suggests how they might be confronted to ensure that democratic freedom is successfully fortified and conserved.
(Please click here to view the book reviews of the First Edition)
Abstract: This article explores how law schools in Australia and Hong Kong address digital disruption, particularly legaltech, and whether curricula equip graduates to manage structural and business-model shifts in legal services. Using a systematic survey of course handbooks identified through keyword searches and coded by inclusion and exclusion criteria, the study maps documented legaltech education. Course descriptions were cross-checked with faculty webpages where possible, though reliance on published handbooks is noted as a limitation. Findings reveal that while legaltech offerings are growing, they remain uneven and fragmented. This gap supports the central argument: law schools must move beyond isolated technology modules to fostering adaptability and change management skills. Practical barriers—such as high software costs and limited staff expertise—further constrain reform despite pedagogical intent. By situating these challenges within broader debates on hybrid legal roles and regulatory disruption, the article underscores the need for legal education to evolve beyond technical knowledge toward preparing graduates for dynamic professional models.
Abstract: The process for reform of corporate restructuring laws in Hong Kong to facilitate the rehabilitation of companies in financial distress has been a difficult and protracted one. Since the late 1990s, the Hong Kong government has attempted, unsuccessfully, on a number of occasions to enact a statutory corporate rescue procedure to address gaps and problems in the existing law. The most recent attempt had led to a draft Companies (Corporate Rescue) Bill that was close to finalisation in 2020–2021, but the Bill was in the end not introduced into the legislature due to opposition from some stakeholders (such as the labour sector and small businesses) on aspects of the proposed procedure. The reform process is now stalled. It is argued in this article that the perceived difficulties were to a large extent already addressed by the draft Bill and that it is imperative for the Hong Kong government to re-start the reform process to enact reforms which are long overdue and which are vital for development and maintenance of Hong Kong’s status as an international centre of commerce and finance.
Thank you to Richard Cullen for drawing and sharing his traditional annual cartoon to mark
The Year of the Horse.
"Harnessing the power of constitutional rights and legal frameworks to scale up public mental health implementation"
Michael Ni, Candi Leung, Trevor Wan, Jonathan Campion, Neeraj Gill, Sandro Galea, Eric Ip
The Lancet Psychiatry
Published online: February 2026
Abstract: This article problematises traditionalist thinking in constitutional adjudication in relation to the rights of same-sex couples, especially those rights that are connected to family life. It identifies two approaches, represented respectively by the case law of the Italian Constitutional Court (ItCC) and the Court of Final Appeal (CFA) of the Hong Kong SAR of the People’s Republic of China. The ItCC has expressly stated that preserving traditional family forms is a reasonable objective per se for the legislature to pursue. The CFA, on the other hand, has challenged this approach to traditionalist thinking in relation to same-sex unions. Despite some contradictory signals within its case law, the CFA has stated that justifying differential treatment based on sexual orientation with reference to tradition is circular reasoning. Drawing on historical, anthropological, and philosophical sources, this article argues that invoking the preservation of tradition, despite its rhetorical force, is empirically and conceptually criticisable and, ultimately, unpersuasive.
Brian
Tang, the Founding executive director of Law, Innovation, Technology &
Entrepreneurship Lab at HKU’s Faculty of Law (LITE Lab@HKU), has had an
impactful year in 2025 as the third year since ChatGPT’s launch passes.
Appointment by Hong Kong Department of Justice to develop
lawtech in Hong Kong
At the beginning of 2025, Brian was appointed and joined the
inaugural
meeting of Hong Kong Department of Justice (DOJ)’s Consultation Group on
Lawtech Development for the term of January 13, 2025 to January 12, 2028. At the first
of a series of the DOJ’s LexGoTech Roundtables (June), Brian was the
keynote speaker and then also served as a facilitator for the roundtable
comprising legal professionals from the Law Society of Hong Kong and the Small and Medium Law Firms
Association of Hong Kong. Brian was later also invited to present at Hong Kong Legal Week 2025 Lawtech
Week’s Insight Stage (November), at
which the LexGoTech
Roundtables Report was also released.
Thought leadership on AI in the legal profession
Brian has continued to speak at numerous industry and
academic this past year: HKU Law’s Regulating
AI in the Public Interest (February), vlex AI Legal Focus Group – Hong Kong (February), HKU
Law’s Hong Kong Lawtech Startup Ecosystem (March), ALB Hong Kong
Regulatory and Anti-Corruption Compliance Summit (March), LexisNexis’
Legal Minds, Digital Tools: Partnering with AI for Better Outcomes (April),
ALITA x LITE Lab@HKU Evolutions
in legal practice: how AI is transforming law firm and legal department
operating models (May), 6th
Lawtech Summit Asia 2025 in Singapore (May), Future
Law 2025 in Tallinn (May), ALITA-ELTA
Asia-Pacific – European Legal Innovation & Tech Dialogue and Curated
Pitches in London (June), LegalTechTalk
2025 in London (June), Legal
Innovation Festival x ALITA Roundtable (September), SMU Law’s Computational Legal Studies Workshop 2025 in Singapore (September),
TechLawFest
2025 in Singapore (September), Hong
Kong In-House Community Congress 2025 (October), and Hong
Kong Law Society Practice Management Committee “Legal AI: Ethics,
Opportunities & Risks” Seminar” (November).
In addition, Brian has been invited to be a judge for FT
Innovative Lawyers APAC and was quoted in “Law
firm training highlights business relationships and tech skills” (May). And
in augmenting his leadership role
as Asia-Pacific Legal Innovation &
Technology Association (ALITA) co-chair, Brian served as chief editor for ALITA State of Legal Innovation in
Asia-Pacific 2025 (which publication was covered in industry publications
such as Artificial
Lawyer, Law.com
and Law
Gazette), and led ALITA’s response to Singapore
Ministry of Law’s Public Consultation on Guide for Using Generative AI in the
Legal Sector (September).
Thought leadership on AI in broader society
Brian has also been appointed a founding member of Fintech Association of Hong Kong AI Strategic Council and hosted the inaugural panel on AI Regulation and Opportunities in Financial Services (January), and has spoken at Asia Financial Forum 2025 on Regtech Revolution (January), Cyberport AI in Finance Solution Day (March) and Hong Kong Data Summit 2025 (June). He was one of the few invitees from Asia-Pacific to attend International Association for Safe and Ethical Artificial Intelligence (IASEAI) Conference 2025 in Paris (February).
Thought leadership on AI in Education and specifically at
Law Schools
Brian continues to support HKU’s initiatives on
incorporating AI ethically in teaching and learning. He spoke at HKU
TALIC AI Ethics in Teaching and Learning Symposium (April) and was invited to
present a TALIC video on Examples
of How Colleagues at HKU Integrate AI and Manage Associated Risks (July), as well as at Inter-University Generative AI Hackathon for SDGs 2025 Workshop (September), at which a LITE Lab team won with a chatbot
to assist Hong Kong migrant workers with their legal rights (November).
Specifically, Brian has been invited to present on his LITE Lab@HKU interdisciplinary and experiential pedagogy, including at PolyU’s Transformation of Higher Education in the AI Era: Innovation, Best Practices, and Impact together with a LITE Lab@HKU student (May), at International Future of Law Association Conference 2025 in collaboration with the Association of Law Teachers on Generative AI and the Future of Legal Education & Research at London South Bank University and Kings College (July), and at Global Alliance of Impact Lawyers (GAIL) Annual Summit 2025 hosting a JusticeTech Student AI Workshop with up to 60 students in Mexico (October).
Thought leadership on fintech and digital assets
In addition to AI, Brian continues to be invited by
industry to share insights on fintech and digital assets, He joined the HKMA and SFC to present at ADB
Digital Bond Forum as part of 42nd ASEAN+3 Bond Market Forum (February);
presented at Australia
Chamber of Commerce Finance, Legal & Tax Committee (August); at ICMA Innovation in Capital Markets
during Hong Kong Fintech Week 2025 (Oct); at Citi
x Bloomberg GBA Fintech Initiative (November). and was quoted
by SCMP
on PBOC’s announcement on digital assets (December).
"From Ashes to Accountability: The Hong Kong Basic Law’s Blueprint for the Common Good and the Rule of Law in the Wake of the Tai Po Fire"
Anfield Tam (BSS (GL) & LLB graduate), Hilary So (JD graduate), Trevor Wan and Eric Ip
I-CONnect: Blog of the International Society of Public Law
Published online: January 2026
Introduction:
On November 26, 2025, a catastrophic fire tore through Wang Fuk Court, a 42-year old public housing estate in Tai Po District, Hong Kong. Ignited amid major renovations, the blaze, fueled by flammable scaffolding nets and polystyrene panels, spread swiftly across seven towers, raging for over 43 hours. It claimed 168 lives (including one firefighter), injured 79 others, and displaced thousands, making it the third-deadliest blaze in the 180-year span of modern Hong Kong history and more than twice as fatal as London’s 2017 Grenfell Tower fire.
Public grief mingled with solidarity: volunteers rallied with aid, memorials bloomed with tributes, yet fury grew over ignored warnings, substandard building materials, and oversight failures in the HK$330 million (US$42.4 million) renovation project. Occurring within Hong Kong’s evolving “one country, two systems” constitutional structure, shaped by new national security laws, electoral reforms for “governance by patriots”, and subdued politics post-2019 protests and COVID-19, the disaster has deepened distrust and probed the rule of law’s endurance. Drawing on Lord Bingham’s classic definition, the rule of law demands accessible, predictable laws that protect rights, restrain power, and ensure fair adjudication. These principles underpin the common good: shared conditions for safe, flourishing lives, enshrined in the Hong Kong Basic Law and the Bill of Rights, incorporating the ICCPR (Article 39). Yet, we argue in this post that translating these into vigilant governance remains elusive in Hong Kong.
The Tai Po fire emerges as a profound litmus test: Can Hong Kong’s public law truly shield vulnerable communities through consistent enforcement and impartial accountability? By linking Lord Bingham’s contemporary formulation of the rule of law to ancient Aristotelian notions of the common good, this analysis that follows bridges Anglo-American and continental jurisprudential traditions. For comparative public law scholars, it offers a compelling window into the resilience of common law amid tightening political pressures. Our analysis explores housing safety, inquiry and inquest mechanisms, Owners’ Corporations, and advocates steadfast adherence to Basic Law values to reclaim justice and the common good.
(Please click here to view full text on I-CONnect: Blog of the International Society of Public Law)
ARCHBOLD HONG KONG 2025
Editor-in-Chief: The Hon Mr Justice Bokhary
General Editor: Professor Simon Young
Sweet & Maxwell
October 2025
Preface by the General Editor
In the 2010 volume of this text, the then General Editor, Mr Clive Grossman SC, referred to the high convictions rates in Hong Kong and likened them to approaching those in North Korea. Those comments sparked controversy and debate in the community. A panel of the Legislative Council (LegCo) discussed the issue in October 2009 and later when the panel discussed reforms to criminal legal aid and whether trial by jury should be incorporated in District Court criminal trials. One positive outcome of the debate was clearer reporting of conviction rates from the Department of Justice (DOJ), by disaggregating the rate in cases of pleas of not guilty from the overall rate, which included guilty plea cases.
Fifteen years on, what trends do we see in the conviction rates in the three levels of criminal courts? The graphs below show the conviction rates after trial compared to the overall conviction rates in the Magistrates’ Court, District Court, Court of First Instance, and all courts combined, from 2010 to 2024. The data is taken from the DOJ Prosecutions Division’s yearly review reports.
Abstract: This study examines the relationship between interdisciplinary educational backgrounds and academic impact among legal scholars. Analyzing data from faculty members at 50 of the world’s leading law schools, we explore whether scholars with degrees in fields outside of law achieve higher scholarly influence than their peers who hold only law degrees. Our findings reveal that legal academics with interdisciplinary training tend to have significantly greater academic impact, suggesting that integrating perspectives from other disciplines enriches legal scholarship. These results underscore the value of interdisciplinary education in the legal academy and support the incorporation of interdisciplinary approaches in hiring practices, curricula and research initiatives to foster innovation and address complex societal challenges.
Abstract: The following sections are included in this chapter: Introduction, Institutional Constraints of Judicial Decision-Making in Divorce Disputes, Gendered Judicial Practices in Divorce Disputes, Gendered Lawyering, Conclusion, References, Statutes Cited