China Studies Centre, The University of Sydney
Date: Thursday 23 July 2020
Time: 11:00 am- 12:30 pm AEST
REGISTRATION REQUIRED
This online event is free and open to the public, registration via Eventbrite is essential.
What are the legal and social implications of Hong Kong’s National Security Law ?
On July the 1st, 1997, the sovereignty of Hong Kong was reverted to China on the model of “one country, two systems,” guaranteed by the Sino-British Joint Declaration and later enshrined in the Basic Law of Hong Kong. The recent enactment of the Hong Kong national security law has fundamentally challenged the “one country, two systems” model. Does the new law contradict the constitutional and legal framework of the HKSAR? Is the Hong Kong national security law any different from or similar to national security laws in other countries and in China? In the 23 years since the handover, major changes have taken place in the media and civil society of Hong Kong. What do these changes tell us about what may come from now?
To discuss these issues, please join us for a webinar event featuring , Professor Bing Ling, Professor Vivienne Bath, Ms Yin-ting Mak (Please note a change of speaker from Shirley Yam to Yin-ting Mak ), and Associate Professor Victoria Hui, moderated by Dr Joyce Nip.
Presented by the China Studies Centre in partnership with the Centre for Asian and Pacific Law and the Media@Sydney Seminar Series at the University of Sydney.
About the speakers
Professor Bing Ling, Professor of Chinese Law, Associate Director, Centre for Asian and Pacific Law, Director China Engagement, The University of Sydney
Professor Ling joined the University of Sydney Law School as Professor of Chinese Law in September 2012. Before coming to Australia, he was a professor and founding member of the Faculty of Law of the Chinese University of Hong Kong. He has also taught at Peking University Law School, University of Michigan Law School and City University of Hong Kong Law School. He received an LLB degree from Peking University in 1989 and an LLM degree from the University of Michigan in 1992. He was awarded a Diploma by the Hague Academy of International Law in 1995. He is the author of books and articles on Chinese civil and commercial law and international law, including Contract Law in China (Sweet & Maxwell Asia, 2002). He was admitted to the Bar of PRC in 1990 and served as an expert witness on Chinese law questions in numerous international litigation and arbitration cases.
Professor Vivienne Bath, Professor of Chinese & International Business Law, Director of the Centre for Asian and Pacific Law, Director of Research, China Studies Centre, The University of Sydney
Professor Bath’s teaching and research interests are in international business and economic law, private international law and Chinese law. She has first class honours in Chinese and in law from the Australian National University, and an LLM from Harvard Law School. She has also studied in China and Germany. Professor Bath has extensive professional experience in Sydney, New York and Hong Kong, specialising in international commercial law, with a focus on foreign investment and commercial transactions in China and the Asian region. Professor Bath speaks Chinese (mandarin) and German.
Ms Yin-ting Mak, former Chair of the Hong Kong Journalists Association
Ms. Yin-ting Mak is a veteran journalist in Hong Kong with more than 35 years of experience. She was among the first batch of Hong Kong journalists allowed to enter mainland China to report about the “two sessions” in 1985. She is a non-executive director of CitizenNews, a non-profit online Chinese-language news service targeting Hong Kong set up by a group of veteran journalists including herself.
Ms. Mak has served in the Executive Committee of the Hong Kong Journalists Association (HKJA) for more than two decades, during which she was the Chairperson of the union for nine years. Her contribution was recognized by the “Champion of Freedom of Speech” award in 2007 by the Visual Artists Guild.
Mak has a Master’s degree in Political Sociology of Development from Leeds University, UK, and an LLB jointly awarded by the University of Hong Kong and Manchester Metropolitan University.
Victoria Tin-bor Hui, Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Notre Dame, USA
Victoria Tin-bor Hui is Associate Professor in Political Science at the University of Notre Dame, USA. She received her PhD in Political Science from Columbia University and her BSSc from the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Hui’s core research examines the centrality of war in the formation and transformation of “China” in history. She is the author of War and State Formation in Ancient China and Early Modern Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2005). Hui also studies contentious politics and Hong Kong’s democracy movement. As a native from Hong Kong, she has testified at Congress and written for Foreign Affairs, the Journal of Democracy, Washington Post’s Monkey Cage, and other channels.
Joyce Nip is a senior lecturer in the Department of Media and Communications, and Department of Chinese Studies at the University of Sydney, where she specialises in Chinese Media Studies. She is also an executive committee member of the China Studies Centre of the University. She was a journalist, and journalism educator and researcher in Hong Kong before coming to Sydney in 2010. Joyce is a member of the editorial board of two British academic journals, Digital Journalism, and Journalism Practice. She also serves as a judge for several journalism awards in the Asia region, including the Awards for Editorial Excellence, and the Human Rights Press Awards.