HKU Legal Scholarship Blog
Follow the research activities and scholarship of the Faculty of Law, The University of Hong Kong
Wednesday, December 3, 2025
Cora Chan on Law and Authoritarian Transition: Anatomy of Hong Kong’s Post-2019 Constitutional Order (Les Éditions Thémis)
Monday, December 1, 2025
Trevor Wan on Globetrotting Advocates: Foreign Barristers in Hong Kong Courts (AJCL)
"Globetrotting Advocates: Foreign Barristers in Hong Kong Courts"
Trevor Wan
The American Journal of Comparative Law
Published Online: November 2025
Friday, November 28, 2025
Brian Tang spoke at the seminar "Legal AI: Ethics, Opportunities & Risks" organized by the Law Society of Hong Kong's Practice Management Committee
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| Pictured (from left to right): Mr. Simon Chan, Mr. Brian Tang, and Mr. Alan Chiu |
On 18 November 2025, the Law Society of Hong Kong's Practice Management Committee, hosted the seminar "Legal AI: Ethics, Opportunities & Risks" which brought together Hong Kong law firm leaders to explore how AI is transforming the way lawyers work, and also the ethical, operational, and professional considerations that come with it. Mr. Brian Tang, the Executive Director of Law, Innovation, Technology & Entrepreneurship Lab (LITE Lab@HKU), has been invited to speak at this eminent event.
The seminar featured the managing and senior partners of prominent Hong Kong and international law firms Gallant, EllaLAN and Dorsey & Whitney and discussed the emerging trends, practical challenges, and how law firms can responsibly integrate AI into their practices. It also provided the opportunity to experience the latest advancements in Legal AI technology through live demonstrations and free trial sessions by Microsoft, Thomson Reuters and Lawplus, showcasing how innovative AI tools are being applied in real-world legal settings.
Brian shared how AI is changing the technological and market landscape for skillsets and mindsets required of lawyers to thrive, and highlighted the duty of practice supervision and management that partners had over their human staff lawyers using AI and the growing number of AI agents. For more details, click here to view Brian's LinkedIn post.
For the coming Hong Kong Legal Week 2025, Brian will also speak at the Hong Kong LawTech Fest on 5 December 2025 for the topic "Lawyers & AI - the evolving roles and skillsets for success". Interested parties can register to attend for free here: https://www.legalweek.hk/en/law-tech
Wednesday, November 26, 2025
Weilin Xiao awarded the Hessel Yntema Prize 2025
Monday, November 24, 2025
Yuxia Zhang and John Liu on The Rise of the Chinese Judiciary and Its Limits: Administrative Litigation in the Reform Period (The China Quarterly)
Friday, November 21, 2025
Douglas Arner et al on Building Digital Payment Ecosystems: Digital Financial Infrastructure, Financial Inclusion, and the UN Sustainable Development Goals (Cal W ILJ)
Douglas Arner, Sijuade Animashaun, Yixiao Cai, Kuzi Charamba
California Western International Law Journal, Volume 55, Number 1 (2024)
Published online: March 2025
Abstract: This article examines how digital payment innovation and supporting initiatives, such as infrastructure and regulation, can foster micro, small, and medium enterprise (MSME) access to finance. This expanded access in turn supports broader sustainable development as reflected in the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Achieving these goals requires thoughtful consideration and management of technological and a range of other risks and impacts across jurisdictions and governance levels.
Digital payment platforms serve as collectors, aggregators and (in some cases) providers of MSME financial and other data. This supports lending, low-cost agent-assisted financial transactions, financial products, and services by conventional banks, micro-finance institutions (MFIs), and non-bank financial institutions. Importantly, the data provided by these platforms can facilitate cash flow analysis and factoring (a form of alternative credit data) in which MSMEs use receivables as collateral (complementing other forms of collateral, such as real properties) to access finance within traditional lending institutions or elsewhere.
As consumer confidence in e-commerce platforms boosts the digital presence of MSMEs, new markets for MSMEs (particularly small retail shops, such as “mom-and-pop” stores providing last-mile services to unbanked and underserved segments in remote areas) emerges. Yet, there have been increasing concerns among policymakers and regulators at national, regional, and international levels......(Please click here to read the full text.)
Wednesday, November 19, 2025
Suhong Yang on The International Organization for Mediation in Hong Kong: A New Chapter in Global Dispute Resolution? (The AsianSIL Voices)
Suhong Yang
AsianSIL Voices
Published online: October 2025
Introduction: Mediation is an important means, for peaceful settlement of international disputes, which is stipulated in various treaties including the UN Charter. The nature of the mediating process promotes the preservation of relationships between the parties and aims to achieve win-win results rather than an adversarial approach where one side must win and the other must lose. On 30 May 2025, the signing ceremony of the Convention on the Establishment of the International Organization for Mediation (IOMed, IOMed Convention, respectively) was held in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People’s Republic of China after two to three years of preparatory work, during which 33 countries, mostly from Africa, Asia, and Latin-America, signed the IOMed Convention. The Convention entered into force on 29 August 2025, following ratification by China, Nicaragua, and Venezuela. The IOMed became operational on 20 October 2025. Presently, the total number of signatory countries has reached 37.
The IOMed is the first intergovernmental organization dedicated to resolving international disputes through mediation. It is also the first international organization headquartered in Hong Kong, a development which has the potential to raise the international profile of Hong Kong as a “capital” for mediation in the world, and strengthen the role of Hong Kong as a hub for international dispute settlement, building on its strong foundation in international arbitration.
This blog highlights the potential of IOMed in global dispute resolution, and reflects on critical perspectives to offer constructive suggestions.
(Please click here to view the full article on AsianSIL Voices.)
Monday, November 17, 2025
Hilary So on Estoppel: adopting constructive trust to remedy an unhonoured promise (Trusts & Trustees)
Hilary H W So (JD 2024, PCLL 2025)
Trusts & Trustees
Published online: October 2025
Friday, November 14, 2025
Kai Tik Au Yeung on Significance of Coordination: A Comparison between the Cape Town Convention and Hague Securities Convention (AsianJIL)
Kai Tik Au Yeung (LLB Graduate 2022 and PCLL Graduate 2023)
Asian Journal of International Law
Published online: October 2025
Abstract: The Cape Town Convention is widely regarded as the most successful international convention in terms of ratifications. This essay aims to explore the fundamental reasons behind this success. While it is undeniable that the Cape Town Convention receives substantial industrial support in response to urgent market demands and the innovative protocols it established, this essay argues that this alone does not fundamentally explain its success.
Instead, the underlying reason lies in the Convention’s ability to avoid the trap of a false dichotomy – where one side seeks to convince the other to agree with its viewpoint. Rather, the key is to strive for a viable compromise that accommodates the perspectives of both, or even multiple stakeholders. This proposition will be illustrated by drawing on the social science concept of coordination, through a comparative analysis of the drafting processes of the Cape Town Convention and the Hague Securities Convention.
Wednesday, November 12, 2025
Adrian Kuenzler on Attuning Big Tech Regulation in Light of Data-Driven Markets (EJPLT)
"Attuning Big Tech Regulation in Light of Data-Driven Markets"
Adrian Kuenzler
European Journal of Privacy Law & Technologies, Special Issue 2025
Published online: October 2025
Abstract: Empirical studies have observed rising concentrations of corporate power. Policymakers, in turn, have envisaged the restructuring of markets by breaking big technology companies up. The Privacy Fallacy persuasively argues that accountability for the consequences of corporate data practices entails creating a new type of tort liability that recognizes the value of privacy. But addressing the effects of digital technologies must also involve competition law, to enable consumers to challenge, contest, or modify their favoured product segments. This involves a sort of influence that enables consumers to meaningfully address the predicaments of digital technologies and making their use more profound.
Monday, November 10, 2025
Julian Nowag on Global Antitrust and Sustainability: Law, Economics, Enforcement (Oxford University Press)
Julian Nowag
Oxford University Press
Published online: September 2025
Friday, November 7, 2025
New book by Eric Ip: Law and Justice in Hong Kong: Principles of the Legal System, Fifth Edition (Sweet & Maxwell)
Eric Ip
Sweet & Maxwell
Published in October 2025
507 pp.
Description: Comprehensively revised and updated, the fifth edition of Law and Justice in Hong Kong: Principles of the Legal System provides a comprehensive exploration of the legal framework of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People’s Republic of China—the sole common law jurisdiction in East Asia.
Incorporating analyses of recent judicial decisions and pivotal legal developments in the post-pandemic era, alongside the emergence of the ongoing artificial intelligence revolution, this edition enables readers to understand the core principles of law and the administration of justice that have shaped Hong Kong’s remarkable transformation from a modest fishing settlement into a premier global financial hub over nearly two centuries.
An indispensable resource for students and candidates preparing for professional examinations in Legal System, Constitutional Law, and Legal Methods, this book also serves as a valuable reference for legal practitioners, jurists, and general readers, both in Hong Kong and beyond, who are intrigued by the dynamics of an internationalised common law system functioning under the sovereignty of the world’s most influential socialist state.
Wednesday, November 5, 2025
Michael Ng and Florence Mok on Suspicious minds: Chinese nationalism, state security and education in Cold War Hong Kong, 1949-70s (Cold War History)
Florence Mok, Michael Ng
Cold War History
Published online: October 2025
Monday, November 3, 2025
New Issue of Hong Kong Law Journal (Vol. 55, Part 2 of 2025)
Vol. 55, Part 2 of 2025
Symposium: The Constitution and the Civil Code in Asia
The Constitution and the Civil Code in East Asia: China, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan
Alec Stone Sweet...153
The Constitutionalisation of Civil Law in South Korea: Practices of Ordinary Courts
Yoon Jin Shin...163
The Development of the Doctrine of Horizontal Effect of Constitutional Rights in Taiwan
Hsiaowei Kuan...191
China’s Civil Code as a Super-Statute: Ramifications for Constitutional Theory
James C Fisher...211
The Interaction of the Constitution and the Civil Code in Japan
Keigo Komamura...233
China’s Civil Code as a Super-Statute: Ramifications for Constitutional Theory
Chong Bu...253
Constitution Talk in the Chinese Civil Courts: Constructing the Constitution through the Civil Code?
Zhuo Ding...277
Articles
Recognition, Relief and Enforcement of Schemes, Plans and Judgments: Towards a Transnational System of Justice in Cross-Border Insolvency
Geoffrey Ma...299
Justice Reimagined: Innovative Remedies in the Courts
Kemal Bokhary...313
The Interface between Arbitration Clauses and Insolvency Proceedings
Hilary So and Anfield Tam...321
The Legal Fiction of Equal Authenticity: A Study of Judicial Interpretation of Bilingual Legislation in Hong Kong
Michael MK Cheung and Anne SY Cheung...341
Sino-US “Chip War”: Can China’s Semiconductor Fiscal and Tax Policies Effectively Break through Technological Blockade?
Jingxian Chen and Kexin Zhou...373
Book Reviews
Yanhong Yin, The Idea of a Chinese Arrest Warrant: Surrender of Fugitive Offenders between Mainland China
Paulo Pinto de Albuquerque...397
Bokhary, Witzleb and Srivastava (eds), Tort Law and Practice in Hong Kong
Craig Purshouse...401
Alec Stone Sweet on The Constitution and the Civil Code in East Asia: China, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan (HKLJ)
Alec Stone Sweet
Hong Kong Law Journal, Vol. 55, Part 2 of 2025, pp.153 - 162
Introduction: In East Asian legal systems, national constitutional law and civil codes are developing in increasingly inter-dependent ways, shaping how lawyers plead and judges resolve certain types of cases, and how doctrinal authorities understand the underlying structure of their respective legal systems. Viewed globally, the “constitutionalisation” of the private law in Asia expands comparative inquiry, inviting scholars to revisit old debates and to consider a new set of questions. In each of the countries under consideration here, the forces driving such processes are complex and multi-dimensional. It is no surprise that in Japan, South Korea and the Taiwan Area, change in how high courts exercise their powers of constitutional judicial review have been crucial to enhancing the salience of rights to the litigation of the civil code. In contrast, the Chinese legal system does not feature a constitutional or supreme court, and judicial review of statute is formally prohibited (but see the discussion of the Supreme People’s Court in Bu and Ding). Nonetheless, the new Chinese Civil Code has revived debates about review — and the juridical status of the Constitution — among Chinese legislators, judges, lawyers and scholars.
Chong Bu on China’s Civil Code as a Super-Statute: Ramifications for Constitutional Theory (HKLJ)
Chong Bu (PhD Candidate)
Hong Kong Law Journal, Vol. 55, Part 2 of 2025, pp.253 - 276
Abstract: The concept of a super-statute refers to an ordinary statutory law with constitutional characteristics, distinguished by its function, normative framework and far-reaching impact. Comparative constitutional experiences highlight the global prevalence of super-statutes as a crucial vehicle for constitutional development. This article examines the role of the Civil Code of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) as a super-statute in developing and entrenching constitutional norms through constitutionalisation of private law, particularly in light of the absent judicial enforceability of the country’s formal constitution. The Civil Code serves as an important legal instrument for governance, fulfilling key constitutional roles in regulating governmental behaviour, safeguarding rights, balancing social interests, upholding fundamental values and navigating societal advancement. Through its established co-ordination mechanisms for judicial application, the Civil Code wields a broad and profound influence across China’s political, legal and societal spheres.
Zhuo Ding on Constitution Talk in the Chinese Civil Courts: Constructing the Constitution through the Civil Code? (HKLJ)
Zhuo Ding (PhD Candidate)
Hong Kong Law Journal, Vol. 55, Part 2 of 2025, pp.277 - 297
Abstract: This article examines the phenomenon of “Constitution Talk” (CT) — explicit references to China’s Constitution in civil court proceedings — to analyze its role in the constitutionalization of the Civil Code. Drawing on empirical data from 2018 civil cases (2017–2024) across three provinces, the study explores how judges and litigants invoke constitutional norms to interpret ambiguous provisions, resolve jurisdictional conflicts and conduct informal judicial reviews. Findings reveal that CT is intensifying, particularly in expropriation and environmental cases, serving as a governance tool to align civil law with constitutional principles. However, its impact is constrained in politically sensitive domains, such as reproductive rights, where courts prioritise policy over constitutional arguments. The study argues that CT reflects a dynamic interplay between legal innovation and state control, offering insights into China’s evolving legal governance under the Civil Code. While CT enhances judicial legitimacy and rights protection, its boundaries underscore the enduring influence of Party policy on constitutional discourse.
Hilary So and Anfield Tam on The Interface between Arbitration Clauses and Insolvency Proceedings (HKLJ)
"The Interface between Arbitration Clauses and Insolvency Proceedings"
Hilary So (PCLL graduate) and Anfield Tam (PCLL graduate)
Hong Kong Law Journal, Vol. 55, Part 2 of 2025, pp.321 - 340
Abstract: This article reviews the line of authorities laid down by the English, Singaporean and Hong Kong courts concerning the approach to stay or dismiss an insolvency petition where the underlying debt is subject to an arbitration clause. While the Hong Kong Approach exhibit logically inconsistencies with its policy preferences by requiring parties to take steps to arbitrate (ie the third Lasmos requirement) before the court’s discretion to stay insolvency proceedings is triggered, the English Approach is overly restrictive with excessive emphasis on the doctrinal mechanism of insolvency law. Accordingly, this article shows preference for the Singaporean Approach, which strikes a fair balance in integrating the policy and doctrinal concerns in relation to arbitration law in the insolvency context, as the basis for Hong Kong’s legal reform. This article concludes by suggesting that the court’s discretion to stay insolvency petitions should generally be exercised unless in so doing an abuse of process would be resulted. Meanwhile, it would be best practice for the parties to spell out in the arbitration clause whether they intend the clause to cover insolvency proceedings in any event.
Michael Cheung and Anne Cheung on The Legal Fiction of Equal Authenticity: A Study of Judicial Interpretation of Bilingual Legislation in Hong Kong (HKLJ)
Michael MK Cheung and Anne SY Cheung
Hong Kong Law Journal, Vol. 55, Part 2 of 2025, pp.341 - 371
Abstract: The principle of equal authenticity seeks to give equal status to Chinese and English legislative texts in Hong Kong. However, challenges arise due to discrepancies between the languages, leading to criticisms of this principle as a legal fiction. Are Hong Kong judges able to maintain equal authority for both language versions of the law? A study of Hong Kong court judgments on s 10B of the Interpretation and General Clauses Ordinance since 1987 finds that while the courts were able to reconcile the two language versions in the majority of cases, the English text was often prioritized in cases of irreconcilable differences since it was enacted first in time. Notably, the Court of Final Appeal’s decision in HKSAR v Chan Chun Kit affirmed this practice, impacting equal authenticity, the rule of law and fairness. The authors propose to repeal and re-enact all authenticated Chinese provisions, or those problematic provisions denounced by the court. At the very least, the public should be alerted that they are reading subsequently authenticated translated texts. Addressing these issues is vital for maintaining the integrity and clarity of legal interpretations in bilingual jurisdictions such as Hong Kong.
The paper is also available on SSRN, please click here.
Book review of Tort Law and Practice in Hong Kong by Craig Purshouse (HKLJ)
Craig Purshouse
Hong Kong Law Journal, Vol. 55, Part 2 of 2025, pp.401 - 403
Introduction: For the latest edition of this leading reference work, the Honourable Mr Justice Kemal Bokhary NPJ remains as editor-in-chief and is joined by two new general editors: Prof Normann Witzleb of the Chinese University of Hong Kong and Dr Neerav Srivastava of Deakin University (replacing Mr Neville Sarony KC, SC and Prof Dhirendra Srivastava). This formidable team is to be congratulated for assembling a line-up of talented academics and practitioners to produce a comprehensive and erudite account of tort law in Hong Kong.




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