Kelvin Kwok
American Business Law Journal, Summer 2026, pp. 151-175
Published online: May 2026
Follow the research activities and scholarship of the Faculty of Law, The University of Hong Kong
"Public interest immunity and judicial deference"
Edward Lui
Legal Studies
Published online: April 2026
Abstract: The puzzle underlying the law of public interest immunity (PII) is well known. In ordinary proceedings all relevant evidence should be placed before the court and the parties, including when the government is one of those parties. But what if some of the relevant evidence – due to reasons in the public interest – cannot be disclosed to the other parties involved? The traditional way in which English law tackles this puzzle is by invoking the law of PII. Ever since the landmark decision in Conway, it has been settled that ‘the courts should balance the public interest in the proper administration of justice against the public interest in withholding any evidence which a Minister considers ought to be withheld’. If the public interest favours disclosure of the evidence, the evidence is admitted and made ‘available to both parties and to the court’; but if the contrary is true the evidence will be excluded altogether from the proceedings and made ‘available neither to the other parties nor to the court’.
"Future Performance and Proof in Contract Damages"
Michael Dimarco, David Winterton
Sydney Law Review
Published online: April 2026
Abstract: A longstanding common law controversy is whether, following a contract’s termination for the defendant’s repudiatory breach, the plaintiff’s entitlement to substantial damages depends upon proving its ability to have performed any outstanding, and now discharged, obligations. This question may arise in various distinct contexts and consideration of the relevant case law reveals that courts have not imposed identical proof requirements across these different scenarios. Despite these ostensible inconsistencies, the adoption of a two-stage model reveals the existence of an intelligible order within the leading authorities. The first stage involves determining the nature of the relationship between the parties’ unperformed obligations. This relationship may decisively determine what the plaintiff must prove to recover substantial damages. But if not, the onus of proving whether the plaintiff would have been able to perform any remaining obligations, if relevant to its entitlement to substantial damages, must be allocated. Proper allocation of this onus requires consideration of certain other features of the case, including most notably the presumptive availability of specific performance to the plaintiff. This article explains the operation of this model by analysing the leading English and Australian decisions, providing a framework for resolving the various scenarios that may arise.
Congratulations to Professor Scott Vietch, who has joined the Series Editors of Econormativities (A new Routledge book series).
Econormativities is a new Routledge book series, publishing novel explorations of normativity for contemporary theorisations of life, in a rapidly evolving global technosocial ecology.
This book series invites original scholarship exploring the emerging realm of ‘econormativity’. A fundamentally interdisciplinary project, the series welcomes contributions from law and legal theory, political and social theory, science and technology studies, environmental studies, human geography, history, the history of ideas, design studies, creative arts research, Indigenous studies, philosophy, anthropology, and any discipline where novel ‘modes of existence’, new norms and new normativities, are challenging existing conceptual, and especially legal, frameworks.
Please click here to read more details about the book series on Critical Legal Thinking (CLT).
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| From left: Fung Chun Hei Justin, Kok Karina Ka Ying, Heng Adriel Wee Xin |
Congratulations to Mr Justin Fung Chun Hei (BSocSc(Govt&Laws)&LLB 3), Ms Kok Karina Ka Ying (BA&LLB 3), and Ms Adriel Heng Wee Xin (BBA(Law)&LLB 3), for winning the Best Memorial prize for the Prosecutor in The 24th Red Cross International Humanitarian Law (IHL) Moot.
The Team takes this opportunity to express their sincere gratitude to the team coaches, Mr Ernest Ng and Mr Jason Ko for their unfailing support and helpful guidance throughout. The Team would also like to thank Mr Chak Hei Lau, Mr Raphael Leung, Mr Jason Louie and Mr Kevin Lau, as well as members of the previous Red Cross Moot Teams, Ms Christy Suen, Mr Fergus Tam and Mr Martin Lau for their kind assistance.
| This is a 5-Day Course Designed for PhD Students and Legal Academics. |
Period: August 24 – 28, 2026 (Monday – Friday)
Venue: The University of Hong Kong
Course Overview
This five-day intensive course introduces PhD students and early career researchers in law and law-related disciplines to computational methods for legal research. Designed specifically for participants with no prior experience in computer programming, the course provides a practical and conceptually grounded introduction to how computational techniques can be used in contemporary legal scholarship.
Computational methods—such as text analysis, data collection, and visualization—are increasingly used across legal studies, socio-legal research, and interdisciplinary work that engages with courts, legislation, policy, regulation, and legal institutions. Yet many legal researchers lack structured opportunities to acquire these skills in a supportive, methodologically oriented environment. This course addresses that gap.
Lecturers:
The course is hosted at The University of Hong Kong and sponsored by the HKU Centre for Interdisciplinary Legal Studies. The course will be taught in English.
Aims and Learning Objectives:
By the end of the course, participants will:
• Understand how computational approaches can be integrated into doctrinal, empirical, and interdisciplinary legal research
• Gain hands-on experience with basic computational techniques commonly used in legal studies
• Develop foundational literacy in programming concepts relevant to research
• Learn to critically assess the strengths and limitations of computational methods in legal contexts
• Be equipped to begin using computational tools independently or in collaboration with other researchers
The emphasis throughout is on methodological understanding and research design, rather than technical mastery.
Course Structure and Content:
The course runs over five consecutive days and combines short lectures, guided hands-on exercises, and discussion sessions. Topics include:
• Introduction to computational legal research and research design
• Working with legal texts and documents
• Basic text analysis and legal corpus exploration
• Data collection, cleaning, and management for legal research
• Visualization and exploratory analysis for legal questions
• Reproducibility, transparency, and ethical issues in computational legal research
Practical sessions are carefully scaffolded and assume no prior coding experience. Examples and exercises are drawn from law and law-related research contexts.
Teaching Approach
The course adopts a beginner-friendly, research-led pedagogy. Technical concepts are introduced slowly and motivated by concrete legal research problems. Participants will work with real legal materials and research scenarios, allowing them to reflect on how computational methods intersect with doctrinal reasoning, qualitative interpretation, and normative analysis.
No prior programming experience is required, and no technical background is assumed.
Who Should Attend?
This course is designed for PhD students in law and law-related disciplines, early career researchers conducting legal, socio-legal, or interdisciplinary research, and researchers interested in incorporating computational methods into their work. Participants from all legal traditions and research areas are welcome.
Fees (in Hong Kong dollars):
• HKU students and staff: $ 2,500
• Students (non-HKU): $ 4,000
• Public: $ 6,000
• $500 discount for early-bird payment by June 15, 2026, Hong Kong Time
Certificate of attendance will be given out to course participants. Register for the course: https://hkuems1.hku.hk/hkuems/ec_hdetail.aspx?guest=Y&ueid=104795. A payment link will be sent to registrants later.
For inquiries, contact Ms. Grace Chan at mcgrace@hku.hk / 39174727.
Introduction: Until very recently, the arc of the law of negligent information non-disclosure appeared to be bending towards ever-greater protection of patient autonomy. The high point of this vision was the 2015 UK Supreme Court decision in Montgomery v Lanarkshire Health Board. Mrs Nadine Montgomery was a pregnant diabetic woman who was not warned of a 9-10% risk of shoulder dystocia, a medical emergency where the baby’s shoulder become trapped behind the mother’s pelvis, associated with a vaginal delivery. Shoulder dystocia carries with it a much smaller risk of serious complications and, unfortunately, both risks eventuated during her labour and so she brought a claim on behalf of her son for the injuries he had sustained. In their joint leading judgement, Lord Kerr and Lord Reed held that a doctor is under a duty ‘to take reasonable care to ensure that the patient is aware of any material risks involved in any recommended treatment, and of any reasonable alternative or variant treatments’. The test of materiality was said to be ‘whether, in the circumstances of the particular case, a reasonable person in the patient’s position would be likely to attach significance to the risk, or the doctor is or should reasonably be aware that the particular patient would be likely to attached significance to it’. The much-maligned House of Lords decision in Sidaway v Board of Governors of the Bethlem Royal Hospital – where the majority had supported the Bolam test, with its focus on whether a professional’s actions complied with responsible peer opinion – was dead.
Ambiguities in Montgomery about what makes an alternative or variant treatment ‘reasonable’ have recently been the subject of another UK Supreme Court decision. McCulloch v Forth Valley Health Board was a claim brought by the window and family members of Mr Neil McCulloch, who had died of a heart attack at home after being discharged from hospital with potential acute pericarditis. His family argued that he should have been offered a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), such as ibuprofen, by the defendants. The claim…...